WHEN AUTHORITARIANISM FAILED IN TUNISIA: AN …
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WHEN AUTHORITARIANISM FAILED IN TUNISIA: AN INVESTIGATION OF THE BEN ALI REGIME AND THE FACTORS THAT LED TO ITS DOWNFALL
A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University
in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Arts in Arab Studies
By
Tyler Pentland Logan, B.A.
Washington, DC April 23, 2012
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Copyright 2012 by Tyler Pentland Logan All Rights Reserved
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I would like to convey my appreciation to my advisor, Dr. Nourredine Jebnoun for the guidance he provided me throughout the duration of this research project. He was an indispensable source of knowledge and an invaluable contributor to the content, scope
and refinement of this thesis. I would like to express my gratitude to Dr. Samer Shehata for the feedback he provided as my reader. I would also like to acknowledge Dr.
Rochelle Davis for the initial guidance she provided to conceptualizing my research project, formulating the research methodology, and preparing my IRB proposal. Her tutelage enhanced the quality of my original research and the subsequent data that I
collected during my trip to Tunisia. My utmost appreciation goes to all who agreed to share their candid testimonies during the interviews I conducted. Thank you for
welcoming me to your country, inviting me to record your personal experiences, and enabling my research; without you, this project would not have been possible. I would like to thank my family and friends for their unrelenting encouragement and inspiration.
Every day you broaden my views, expand my understanding, and always challenge me to succeed.
Finally, the research and writing of this thesis
is dedicated to the people of Tunisia, and to those who oppose tyranny for the sake of freedom.
May your courage prevail,
TYLER PENTLAND LOGAN
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 1 Methodology ...................................................................................................................... 6 Organization of the Thesis .............................................................................................. 11 Chapter I: L’Espoir et Désespoir: Ben Ali’s Transition to Power ................................. 12 Espoir – Mission of Modernity ....................................................................................... 14 Désespoir – Dissatisfaction Outweighs Achievement ..................................................... 17 Sliding into Dictatorship .................................................................................................. 24 “Tagheer al Mubarak” (The Blessed Change) ................................................................. 27 C’est Qui Ben Ali? ........................................................................................................... 28 A New Savior? ................................................................................................................ 30 Rewriting History to Earn Legitimacy ............................................................................. 33 Conclusion ....................................................................................................................... 35 Chapter 2: Keeping People out of Politics: Ben Ali’s Authoritarian Model ................... 37 The “National Pact” ......................................................................................................... 38 Authoritarian Elections .................................................................................................... 44 Rassemblement Constitutionnel Démocratique (RCD) ................................................... 50 Politicians – “A Necessary Evil” ..................................................................................... 51 The Political “Opposition” ............................................................................................... 52 Ben Ali’s “Blank Check” ................................................................................................. 59 Sacrificing Contestation for Security ............................................................................... 60 The Role of the Syndicate ................................................................................................ 65
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The Civil Society Mafia ................................................................................................... 66 Conclusion ....................................................................................................................... 67 Chapter 3: The “Rashwa” (Bribe) State ........................................................................... 71 Economic Regionalization ............................................................................................... 78 Positive Economic Growth – Statistics Supercede Sociology ......................................... 80 Caisse 26/26 and the Image of Development .................................................................. 82 Understanding the Economy – “Liberal with a Savage Dimension” ............................... 84 Ben Ali’s Mafia – The Key to His Undoing .................................................................... 90 The Rashwa State ............................................................................................................. 96 Managing Unemployment ............................................................................................... 98 The Educational Agenda – Quantity Over Quality ........................................................ 100 Tunisian Political-Economy ........................................................................................... 104 Conclusion ..................................................................................................................... 109 Chapter 4: The Security State ........................................................................................ 113 MOI or RCD? .................................................................................................................117 The Use of RCD Informants .......................................................................................... 121 The Placebo Effect ......................................................................................................... 125 The Use of Propaganda .................................................................................................. 128 Clandestine Communication .......................................................................................... 129 Disregard for Human Rights .......................................................................................... 134 Chapter 5: Dégage: The Discourse of Desperation ........................................................ 137 Longevity by Constitutional Reform ............................................................................. 138 2008 Uprisings ............................................................................................................... 140
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Madame la Présidente .................................................................................................... 142 Waning Support Among Key International Actors ....................................................... 144 WikiLeaks Confirms Corruption ................................................................................... 146 Muhammad Bouazizi: “His Case was Our Case” .......................................................... 148 Bi Kuli Hazim – Unrest Returns to the Interior ............................................................. 149 New Communication Reveals Shared Grievances ........................................................ 151 “Merci Facebook:” The Role of Social Media .............................................................. 154 La’a Khowfa B’ada al-Youm ........................................................................................ 156 Ben Ali’s “Spanish Castle” ............................................................................................ 157 RCD OUT ...................................................................................................................... 160 Economic Syndicates – Political Affairs no Longer a Priority .......................................162 Expecting the Unexpected ............................................................................................. 165 Chapter 6: The Aftermath .............................................................................................. 167 Digesting Revolution – Popular Revolt or Coup? ......................................................... 177 Ben Ali’s Legacies ......................................................................................................... 180 Deconstructing Ben Ali’s “Political Schizophrenia” ..................................................... 187 Conclusion ..................................................................................................................... 188 Appendix A: Formal Interview Questions for all Research Subjects ............................. 190 Appendix B: IRB Certification ...................................................................................... 192 Appendix C: Photos ....................................................................................................... 193 Bibliography ................................................................................................................... 197
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INTRODUCTION
It would be an unfortunate understatement to discount the impact of the events that
transformed the political landscape of Tunisia in the lead up to January 14, 2011. Not
only did these events instigate dramatic shifts to national parameters of Tunisia’s social,
economic and political constructs, but they ushered in a (delayed “third” wave1) of
political reforms that led to the downfall of entrenched authoritarian regimes across North
Africa and pioneered a new political identity for the Arab World, defined by the efforts of
ordinary citizens who challenged and ended prolonged periods of dictatorship. Beyond
the circumstantial evidence that underscores Tunisia as the unique impetus in which the
Arab World’s regional anomaly of authoritarianism was finally challenged, the Tunisian
case is relatively sterile and continues to leave onlookers puzzled in explaining the
preconditions that eventually marked it as the first example of a successful popular revolt
against a tyrannous regime that represented one of the most notorious of the region’s
durable authoritarian examples.
Students of international relations of the Arab World have grown familiar with
regional themes that have long dominated the scholarship, like the absence of democracy,
resilience of durable authoritarianism, underdeveloped civil society and the broad
pervasiveness through which these characteristics are shared by countries in a single
unique region – ultimately preempting the following question – one yielding a political
paradox that remained unsolved for decades: why did the wave of democracy fail to
1 Reference to Samuel Huntington’s 1991 work on the post-Cold War democratization trend, The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1991.
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break on the shores of not a single country in the Arab World?2 The commendable
attempts to answer this question over decades demarked with signposts, vantage points,
and paradigms that have guided the trajectory of the scholarship spurred a myriad of
credible, yet unsatisfactory studies to decipher this regional quagmire. Ironically, despite
this unwavering devotion embodied by years of scholarly contributions, political
scientists failed to predict the dramatic events that unmistakably underscored a
monumental blip on the region’s historic timeline, manifested in rumblings of revolution.
That unmistakable “blip” – Tunis, Tunisia on January 14, 2011 brought an end to
an unwavering trend following the forced departure of Tunisia’s former president, Zine
El Abedine Ben Ali and ending a 23-year dictatorship. After a month of incremental
demonstrations, Ben Ali and his family were deposed from Tunisia’s government in a
coordinated popular revolution linked to grievances reflecting universal discontent over
the country’s economic stagnation, unemployment, poverty, lack of political freedom,
and consistent disregard for fundamental human rights. In the subsequent weeks, we
witnessed the deconstruction of the former regime, as Tunisia’s interim governments laid
the groundwork for an entirely new, inclusive system that strives to be absent of former
regime leadership or bare any resemblance to it. We have yet to witness the
consequences of this dramatic restructuring of Tunisia’s entrenched authoritarian
government until a new constitution is indoctrinated and national elections are held. To
be certain, Tunisia turned the Arab World’s “authoritarian anomaly” on its head.
Attributed with one of the leading works on the subject of “dense” authoritarian
durability, Posusney and Angrist highlighted that although “democratic stirrings” had
2 The extent to which one can argue that a democratic wave has in fact engulfed the region remains up for debate, and is contingent on the outcome of Tunisia’s political experiment, further complicating the Middle East’s political debacle.
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begun to be seen in very specific examples across the Middle East, it was “too soon to
herald the dawn of a Middle Eastern ‘democratic spring,’” since the region was “home to
the world’s most tenacious authoritarian rulers, whose very longevity [called] into
question the potential for rapid transformation.” 3 The prerequisites that are laid out in
explicit detail throughout their work reflect on the region’s regressive tendencies toward
democratization – attributed to, among other things, weak institutions, security
apparatuses, cultural and economic influences, and calculated political reform – an
analysis supported by Sadiki to explain Ben Ali’s political “reform” strategies. He argues
that “Ben Ali’s reforms [represented] yet another phase in the reproduction of a
hegemonic political practice” based on control, not democratic power sharing.4
Previously, these factors drove regional scholars to conclude that there was “little cause
for optimism that authoritarian countries in the Middle East [would] undergo transitions
to democracy in the near future.” Angrist again in 2007 independently verified that Ben
Ali’s assumption and consolidation of power “[looked] viable for the foreseeable
future.”5 The events that unfolded in Tunisia challenged the views of the field’s leading
experts and proved to the world that enduring authoritarianism had in fact, failed in a
region that seemed immune to political liberalization.6
The traditional means through which Arab rulers were capable of subverting these
“stirrings” (for an additional five years in Tunisia) were grounded in fundamental
3 Posusney, Marsha Pripstein. “The Middle East’s Democracy Deficit in Comparative Perspective,” in Marsha Pripstein Posusney and Michele Penner Angrist, Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2005, p. 1. 4 Sadiki, Larbi. “Bin Ali’s Tunisia: Democracy by Non-Democratic Means,” British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies (2002), 29(1), 57-78, p. 57. 5 Angrist, Michele Penner. “Whither the Ben Ali Regime in Tunisia?” in Bruce Maddy-Weitzman and Daniel Zisenwine, eds., The Maghrib in the New Century: Identity, Religion, and Politics. University Press of Florida: Gainesville, 2007, p. 176. 6 Posusney, pp. 1-2; 16.
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practices that sustained regimes for decades. As Schlumberger explains, the source of
authoritarianism stems from its “working mechanisms and inner logic,” and did not
necessarily require analysis that seeks to understand why democratic transitions had
failed to occur. Still, Schlumberger and his contributing authors were on to something in
their collective work published in early 2007, noting immediately in the introduction that
consensus had been met by the field’s scholars that the new millennium had brought
about significant political developments across the region, and that “the winds of change”
were beginning to blow; however, disagreement remained over whether this political
reform would resemble democratization.7
Alexander described Ben Ali’s Tunisia as a “deeply authoritarian place” that was
dominated by a president who faced no serious institutional constraints and who directed
a ruling party that was essentially indistinguishable from the organs of the state. The
“rules of the political game” as he adds made it impossible for opposition parties, alone
or in coalition, to replace it. Maintaining consistency with his colleagues, Alexander
describes how the government regularly violated “a broad range of individual and
collective rights,” and believed (incredibly as recently as 2010), that since Tunisians had
never changed a president or ruling party by ballot box or by violence, that “they [were]
not likely to do so anytime soon.”8 A leading expert on Tunisian politics, Alexander’s
inability to foresee Ben Ali’s removal from power is not only indicative of the opinions
surrounding Tunisia’s perceived stymied politics, but the Arab World’s entrenched
propensity to robust authoritarianism. Hibou notes that the Ben Ali regime exercised an
7 Schlumberger, Oliver. Debating Arab Authoritarianism: Dynamics and Durability in Non-Democratic Regimes. Stanford University Press: Chicago, 2007, pp. 1-2. 8 Alexander, Christopher. Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghreb. Routledge: New York, 2010, p. 36.
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“undeniable repression” that fused mechanisms of oppression and domination to furbish a
quintessential authoritarian system, or dictatorship. Hibou’s impressive study of
Tunisia’s “political-economy of repression” reinforces Eva Bellin’s research from the
early 1990s on Tunisia’s “stalled democracy”9 and the Ben Ali regime’s normalization of
authoritarian legitimacy via “economic mechanisms and techniques” that allowed people
to live “normal lives” while assuring allegiance to Ben Ali through “concrete” measures
of force that authorized “control, economic security, surveillance, and wealth creation” –
balancing the country’s championed “economic miracle” and “repression.” When
considering the latter, coupled with the regime’s reliance on its omnipresent “coercive
apparatus”10 to compel enduring acquiescence, this work intends to demonstrate that it
was these very factors that prolonged the life of the regime, that ironically, contributed to
Ben Ali’s ultimate demise.11
With regard to the president himself, Hibou and Hulsey highlight that there has
been a tendency in the scholarship to personalize power and emphasize Ben Ali’s
responsibility for state repression, looking specifically at, “the breadth of arbitrary
decisions that perturb administrative functions; the existence of a system of loyalty
founded on fear of, and gratification by, the chief; and the lack of a social basis for
political power associated with the perceived apathy and passivity of the given society.”12
Similarly, expanded analysis noted by the authors focuses on the “importance of the
9 Bellin, Eva. Stalled Democracy: Capital, Labor and the Paradox of State-Sponsored Development. Cornell University Press: New York, 2002, pp. 1-3. 10 Bellin, Eva. “Coercive Institutions and Coercive Leaders,” in Marsha Pripstein Posusney and Michele Penner Angrist, eds., Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2005, p. 27. 11 Hibou, Béatrice. The Force of Obedience: The Political Economy of Repression in Tunisia (trans. Andrew Brown). Polity Press, Cambridge: 2011, pp. 3-4. 12 Hibou, Béatrice and Hulsey, John. “Dominance and Control in Tunisia: Economic Levers for the Exercise of Authoritarian Power,” Review of African Political Economy (June 2006), 33(108), 185-206, p.186.
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police and institutional repression, as well as the absence of freedoms of expression,”
fixated on the policies that were disseminated directly by the president himself.13 This
thesis supports this assessment and will attempt to sustain the argument that Ben Ali’s
indispensable role as “chief” of the Tunisian state should not be underappreciated, and
that his removal from power explains the subsequent collapse of the authoritarian system
that coddled him.14 In his 2007 work “Tunisia’s ‘Sweet Little Regime,’” Clement Henry
did not consider Hibou and Hulsey’s mechanisms of oppression as necessary quantifiers
to further the argument that Ben Ali led a “rogue” or even “repressive” state, instead it
was the extent to which “the political leadership (…) [deviated] from applicable social
norms” exposing the vulnerability to combinations of internal and international pressures
for change. Henry predicted that the regime’s “irrational nature of repression” eventually
would delegitimize Ben Ali’s authority to rule – even for those closest to him, but as this
thesis argues, repression represents only one of several factors that can be highlighted to
explain the regime’s downfall.15
Methodology:
The rapid evolution of contemporary events presumes that the temporal linear
predisposition of this particular case study offers few opportunities to conduct a research
project, even with the advantage of hindsight, and would result in an extreme limitation
to extrapolating ample data and citing steady trends needed to adequately support a
theory. Thus, more appropriate questions stem from the pre-revolutionary period and
13 Ibid. 14 Ibid. 15 Henry, Clement, “Tunisia's Sweet Little Regime,” in Robert Rotberg, ed., Worst of the Worst: Dealing with Repressive and Rogue Nations, Brookings Institution Press, 2007, p. 300.
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find their origins further back in Tunisian history, specifically at the onset of Ben Ali’s
ascension to the presidency. After 23 years in office, what spawned this unprecedented
wave of revolutionary demonstrations? By conducting a comprehensive research project
around the political, social, and economic conditions of Ben Ali’s Tunisia, one is able to
identify the critical trends that inspired a popular political transformation of this caliber.
Many of these critical trends are likely to be uncovered in a more relevant context given
contemporary knowledge of the ultimate political outcomes that are now within our scope
and can be more accurately narrated chronologically, perhaps generating a framework for
regional political economy studies or a new paradigm for the democratization literature in
the future. By linking the eventual downfall of the former regime (initiating a downgrade
of authoritarianism to at least some degree) with the identifiable causes that we now
know were catalysts to the regime’s downfall, a platform for analysis is introduced where
pertinent literature and the lived experiences of local research subjects represent adequate
contributions to the study of authoritarianism and Tunisia’s political experience.
It will not be argued here that the Tunisian revolution is an example where
democracy is considered a force that ultimately chipped away at the authoritarian
behemoth; rather, this study will approach the exodus of Ben Ali from a more cynical
angle – where the causes of regime collapse in Tunisia were propagated by the inept, self-
deprecating, and corrosive features produced by the regime itself, where the “failure” of a
conventional, yet highly sophisticated authoritarian model offered the latitude for
political contestation. Had the regime maintained focus on preserving its sophisticated
apparatus, it is unlikely that “Arab Awakening” or Arab uprisings would have found their
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origins in an impoverished Tunisian town with the desperate action of a penniless fruit
vendor.16
The aspirations of this assessment are to convince the reader that by identifying
critical features of the Ben Ali regime and its observable transformations over 23 years, I
will support the conclusion that the system that Ben Ali created was ultimately destined
to fail. I hope to prove that the collapse of the Ben Ali regime transpired from its
authoritarian backsliding. By combining the relevant scholarship and the primary
research content offered by my interview subjects, I will support a tight argument that
should convince the reader that the events that transpired on January 14, 2011 were
actually not that surprising.
The foundations for the research comprising this investigation rest on a series of
primary interviews,17 arranged and managed by the author, and contextualized by a
comprehensive literature review of secondary sources covering a survey of topics
including: authoritarianism, history, social science, and political economy. The dramatic
transition that transpired in Tunisian politics warrants an analysis that centers on the
perceptions and opinions of local Tunisian citizens who for the first time were able to
discuss in detail the intricacies of a regime that instinctively suppressed dissent and
revoked individual freedoms. As a result, holding in-country interviews became an ideal
method of data collection given the unprecedented access I had to information that in
many cases, had been forbidden from disclosure in public are now being revealed for the
first time. These interviews represented the predominant vessel of data collection and
16 Appendix C-1. 17 Note on Coding: Throughout the text, interviews are footnoted and identified by a series of three numbers separated by periods. The first number denotes the interview consecutive placement in the research study, the second number represents the linear corresponding month the interview was conducted, and the third represents the day it was conducted. The identities of the interviewees are not disclosed.
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were based on pre-drafted questions18 in English, unless French or Arabic translation was
required.
A total of twenty in-country interviews were conducted, across a sprawling
sample of research subjects with varying backgrounds, including: students, professors,
human rights activists, political party representatives, cyber activists, economists,
businessmen, civil society leaders, international governance consultants, and media
specialists. Research subjects ranged in age from approximately nineteen years old, to
approximately 60 years old and represented a near equal gender ratio. All interviews
were conducted in the capital and covered a socio-economic sample between middle class
and upper-middle class individuals. Approximately five of these research subjects were
made available through the author’s personal and professional contacts; a base that was
subsequently expanded via snowball sampling and in some cases, the use of cold calls
after arriving in-country. Of the twenty interviews conducted, only fourteen have been
formally cited in this assessment given the propensity for information to be repeated by
research subjects or to avoid redundancy with material from the scholarship.
In order to maintain the discretion of a participant’s identity, names will never be
referenced throughout this analysis. Given the sensitivity of the information that was
discussed and the author’s priority in protecting the welfare of all research participants, it
was imperative that discretionary measures were taken to ensure the privacy and
protection of information obtained throughout the research period. Since the interviews
that were conducted for this assessment took place only five months after the revolution,
perceived threats to an individual’s personal security were palpable and continue to linger
even to the date of this piece’s publication, reflective largely of the difficulties that any 18 Appendix A, Formal Interview Questions for All Research Subjects.
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new government will face when attempting to fully dismantle the entrenched,
omnipresent security apparatus that remained in the former regime’s wake. Interviewees
had low confidence that the removal of the regime’s leadership would suddenly leave
them immune to the former security state and its lingering elements and the threats they
posed to personal safety. Although these concerns were highlighted by most participants
during the interview, they did not appear to restrict their commentary or affect their
willingness to participate after being assured that their contributions would remain
anonymous. Stipulations outlined in Georgetown University’s IRB research protocol19
were upheld to the highest standards and ensured protection for all participants in this
project.
This paper surveys the methods and strategies pursued by Tunisia’s fallen authoritarian
regime. The questions that are inspired by this particular case study yield elaborate and
perhaps, incomplete answers given the historic significance of Ben Ali’s eventual
departure from power, derived not only from his personal abdication under popular
pressure, but the subsequent fallout of political activism that has followed. The sluggish
political evolution that stalled the development and growth of democracy in the Middle
East underscores the significance of any meaningful political transition, and compels the
subsequent challenge against Middle Eastern authoritarianism. Rather than adhering to
traditional discourse founded in the anomaly of democratic immunity and the elements
that contributed to authoritarian durability across the region, the Tunisian revolution
provides a new vantage point for analysis, one that this thesis has adopted.
19 Appendix B, Georgetown University IRB# 2011-227.
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It should be noted that the content on which this analysis will focus directly
reflects and is shaped around the primary fieldwork data. I have not attempted to include
or exclude scholastic prose for any particular reason but pursued this particular approach
to amplify and contextualize the untapped contributions and experiences of the
interviewees. The author does not suggest a preferential consideration to the following
topics and recognizes that inspiration for additional research can stem from this particular
thesis.
Organization of the Thesis:
Chapter 1 will focus on the final years of Tunisia’s first president, Habib Bourguiba, and
Ben Ali’s acquisition of power in what has been described as the “Transition Period.”
Subsequently, Chapter 2 will discuss the consolidation of Ben Ali’s political authority,
touching on a variety of topics including, political opposition, civil society, elites, and
approved modes of political expression. Chapter 3, appropriately titled the “Rashwa”
(Bribe) State, will describe the economy, regionalization, corruption, oppressive
economic mechanisms and means of social control, unemployment, and the education
system. Chapter 4 will cover elements pertaining to the country’s complex security state,
human rights issues, media and propaganda, oppositional activism, and clandestine
communication. Chapter 5 will provide an assessment of the regime’s downfall,
highlighting the causal factors that led to the December 2010 uprisings and Ben Ali’s
eventual departure. A conclusion explaining the regime’s legacy and longevity will be
offered in Chapter 6.
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CHAPTER 1
L’ESPOIR ET DÉSEPOIR: BEN ALI’S TRANSITION TO POWER
“People welcomed the coming of Ben Ali with a lot of hope because they were thirsty for
change. No one thought about the kind of person Ben Ali was, they focused more on the
prospect of something new, and the impact a change would have on their lives, which had
become difficult and dull…politically, socially, economically – Ben Ali was viewed as a
savior.”20
23 years ago when Zine el Abedine Ben Ali ascended to the presidency and seized power
from his predecessor and Tunisia’s first post-independent dictator, Habib Bourguiba,
onlookers watched with great anticipation as the young and apparently more liberal ruler
embarked on a massive campaign of political, economic and social reforms to rebuild
fragile domestic institutions and restore confidence in the Tunisian presidency.
Unfortunately, the stark contrasts between Ben Ali and Habib Bourguiba were temporary,
and soon were recognized as categorical steps oriented towards a clear reversion to the
country’s notorious status quo, fostering an even greater diversion from hollow promises
of democracy and political liberalization. The “transition period” as it was appropriately
coined, reconfigured 20th century Tunisian politics. This chapter will investigate the
primary conditions that prompted Ben Ali’s pseudo-liberalization strategy at the onset of
his rise to the presidency.
20 Interview (17.6.2).
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The transitional period (lasting roughly between 1987 and 1992) is a critical
period in Tunisian history that falsely represented what many believed embodied a
necessary era of political and social reforms that strayed away from the country’s history
of authoritarianism under the Bourguiba presidency. Amid promises to carry out an array
of reforms following his ascension to office, Ben Ali vowed to usher the country into a
new age of democratic and social development unlike his predecessor, prompting many
to support the coup that secured his position in Tunisia’s highest office. The scholarship
and personal testimonies confirm that he was welcomed by the masses and that his
administration represented the prospect for much needed change..
In what is described as a period of “Espoir et désespoir” (hope and desperation),
the undignified forfeiture of the Tunisian presidency by the country’s first dictator
offered what many believed would be the pivotal moment that Tunisians had been
waiting for; the chance to undergo a political shift towards democracy under their new
president, who outwardly appeared to want the same thing.21 Unfortunately, it only took
a couple of years to realize that these anticipated reforms never materialized, and
ironically, conditions grew comparatively worse under the country’s new leadership.
This chapter will provide a brief overview of Bourguiba’s legacy, the conditions under
which the political transition occurred, and the initial years of Ben Ali’s rule. The
despair that marred the unrestrained expectations of a fresh start to the country’s political
history cannot be understated, and reveals an almost poetic misfortune for the people of
Tunisia who prepared for the arrival of a long-delayed democratic transition but were
forced instead to endure another 23 years of dictatorship.
21 Interview (3.5.24).
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Espoir – Mission of Modernity:
The legacy of Tunisia’s first president, Habib Bourguiba engenders an uncomfortable
juxtaposition between the fond and almost reverent admiration that most Tunisians
espouse for their first leader and the realities of his incremental construction of a
dictatorship, which tended to outweigh his achievements and credibility in the years that
led to the coup that removed him from power. The contradictions that this confusion
generates were well documented in response to the leading questions posed to
participants in this research project. The demise of Bourguiba was recalled by all
interviewees, and the content that reflected their memories on the country’s only
transition of power prior to the events of 2011 were remarkably vivid and established a
valuable backdrop to the emotions, uncertainties, prospects and disappointments that
emanated from this remarkable period in Tunisian history; history has been kind to
Bourguiba 23 years after the fact. In order to fully understand the impact that Bourguiba
impressed on the contemporary Tunisian state, questions were framed around the legacies
of both presidents and were specifically designed to conceptualize the state’s formal
historic narrative. The personal anecdotes and contributions from interviewees
corroborated much of the material that reflected Bourguiba’s legacy, although there was
much to say about the corrosive impact his dictatorship had on the country in the late
1980s.
For most interviewees, Habib Bourguiba carries memories of a “great liberator,” a
hero who helped usher the country out of its colonial past into a long-anticipated political
emancipation. His reputation as one of the Arab World’s first leaders to stand up to a
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colonial power and facilitator of a relatively peaceful transition of power from – in
Tunisia’s case – the French system of direct rule to the Tunisian people, is also viewed as
the impetus for several other liberation movements that spread across the Arab world.22
Bourguiba’s charisma and heroic persona underscore his image as a “great savior,” and
people genuinely believed that he was the primary figure responsible for building the
modern state of Tunisia.23 Concurrently however, Bourguiba’s effective campaign to
hyperbolize his personal contribution to the creation of an independent state awarded him
a broad mandate to exercise authority, and as much as he perpetuated a national discourse
focused on unity and universal freedom, he also ensured that the system he created would
make the state and its citizens highly dependent on him.24 His historic role can be
isolated to a handful of initiatives that were periodically cited in this study:
• Modernity: Bourguiba is viewed as the father of modernization in Tunisia. He
created a system that he envisioned would exploit the advancements that
colonization had introduced, like governance, education, language and secularism.
However, he also attempted to marginally disassociate Tunisia from its colonial
past by minimizing the impact of more positive influences that France had on the
modern Tunisian identity. Bourguiba intended to remain independent of the Pan
Arabism movement that swept across the region in the 1960s with the intention of
adhering to more Western values and traditions, encouraging Tunisians to extol
their newfound national independence and freedoms, despite the Arab World’s
22 Interview (3.5.24). 23 Interview (14.6.1).; Interview (5.5.25). 24 Interview (17.6.2).
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simultaneous calls for unity.25 Overall, Bourguiba’s emphasis on modernity can
be divided into three distinct trends: the personalistic narrative as a beloved
patriot, which bolstered his legitimacy; the architect of state-welfare socialism,
under which essential services like education, healthcare, women’s rights, and
family planning were free; and the economic and social liberator for, privatizing
industry, abolishing polygamy, and adhering to the French education system –
changes that made him “dear to the hearts” of Tunisians and perpetuated his
heroic identity.26
• Image of anti-Colonialism: In order to rally support in favor of projects intended
to underscore a clear and independent Tunisian identity, much of Bourguiba’s
rhetoric veered away from French culture and its prolonged influence over
Tunisia’s contemporary history. However, this subtle attempt to remove Tunisia
from French influence was an ineffective strategy under the state’s modernization
renaissance, which as previously highlighted, incorporated several critical
elements from the French colonial period – predominantly structural elements that
buttressed the state, government, institutions, constitutional emulations,
education, language, social norms and the role of religion.
• Modernity Trumps Political Islam: Bourguiba perceived an inherent
incompatibility between Islam and the construction of his version of the modern
state. Participants noted that Bourguiba made it impossible for people to favor
25 Interview (5.5.25). 26 Ibid.
17
both Islam and the state’s vision, because they contradicted one-another. Most
Tunisians believed that this philosophy offered an acceptable compromise,
especially during the latter years of Bourguiba’s presidency when the country’s
primary Islamist group, the Mouvement pour la Tendance Islamique (MTI), began
adopting more radical oppositional tactics, proving that Islamists were hostile
liabilities to his political agenda. Bourguiba’s abusive propaganda against
Islamists ostracized, and made them feared in Tunisian society, “making many
unaware of what they were capable of,” according to one interviewee.27
Although Bourguiba’s somewhat controversial legacy is viewed favorably by
participants, it is certainly worth considering that the unrestrained fond reflection for
Bourguiba that was pervasively evident in each interview may have been especially
poignant given the temporal conditions of this research project – where a lesser of two
evils logic supported the interviewees’ broad favorability towards their first dictator is a
plausible explanation to his positive legacy when compared with Ben Ali.
Désespoir – Dissatisfaction Outweighs Achievement:
Despite the previous attributes that invoked more positive images of Bourguiba, his
infallible façade was chipped away in the latter years of his presidency and led to a
remarkable shift in popular favorability toward the regime’s numerous shortcomings and
eventually, repressive attributes that seemed to tarnish the leader’s early achievements.
Although Bourguiba’s government was not democratic, it was the failures of his “non-
27 Interview (16.6.1).
18
democratic choices” and the resulting consequences for Tunisians that made people
change their views. Most cited are: the failure of the socialist experiment based on
centralized planning and the collectivization of agriculture and retail trade (1961-1969);
the trust he placed in his inner circle; the corruption of the elites indentured to the state
party; and his self-proclamation as lifelong president in 1975.
The propaganda machine that had so affectively marginalized Tunisia’s Islamists
and garnered support for Bourguiba’s modernization programs, had simultaneously been
perpetuating a positive image masking serious economic and social ailments that
eventually grew to levels beyond the government’s ability to hide them and invoked the
repressive image of Bourguiba’s politics.28 The positive portrayals of Tunisia’s liberation
period and the valiant role that Bourguiba played did not match the historic realities that
were revealed to those who studied the period outside of the state’s education system.29
One interviewee highlighted that there were other “good people” beside Bourguiba who
did things for Tunisia, but Bourguiba intended to portray himself as a gilded and
indispensable element of the state, and he prevented any consideration for alternative,
collective contribution of the people. Only a few isolated personalities other than
Bourguiba were credited for the state’s achievements, when it was in fact, a national
effort that all Tunisians felt they were a part of.30 These championed personalities
included Bourguiba himself, most of the country’s elites, as well as the country’s
incumbent president Ben Ali. All of them came from the country’s coastal Sahel31 region
and represented a very distorted demographic absent of representation from the highly
28 Interview (11.5.30). 29 Ibid. 30 Interview (3.5.24). 31 Will be used throughout the thesis to describe the central part of Tunisia’s eastern coastline from the south of Hammamet town to the city of Mehdia, and the city of Sousse.
19
impoverished areas in the south or the Interior32. Bourguiba routinely focused his
attention and subsequently made decisions that favored the Sahel in order to sustain
support among those who had the means to depose him. This regional imbalance in
development between the Sahel and the Interior continued well beyond Bourguiba’s
presidency and is a significant data point to flag when attempting to understand the
eventual demise of Ben Ali decades later. Persistent marginalization of the Interior under
Bourguiba initiated a policy focused on coddling the country’s small but powerful elite
population by focusing development projects and state-led investment discriminately in
the Sahel region, while simultaneously asphyxiating the Interior of critical resources and
opportunities.33
Remembered for his famous mantra, in which his personalized view of power was
emphasized, “L’Etat, c’est moi”34 (I am the State) he invoked an image of a “combatant
suprème” (supreme fighter) in the liberation movement, generating a perception that the
Tunisian people, or as one participant recalled, the “poussière” 35 (dust) of the nation
owed their freedoms to him and exploited his ego to derive legitimacy and his enduring
longevity as president. After decades, this demoralizing and paternalistic relationship
began to make people feel like nothing; like they had no self-worth, collective identity, or
that they really contributed to the creation of the state that had begun to control them.
These perceptions were reified even further by the state’s socialist policies, which
32 Will be used throughout the thesis to describe the Tunisian countryside in the interior and south. 33 Interview (3.5.24). 34 An homage to Louis XIV’s famous mantra. 35 Quoting Habib Bourguiba, “D’une poussière d’individus, d’un magma de tribus, de sous-tribus, tous courbés sous le joug de la résignation et du fatalisme, j’ai fait un peuple de citoyens.” (“Tunisians were nothing but a dust of individuals… out of which I created a nation.”)
20
cemented a relationship between those who were dependent on the state – “like a father
who reared his needy children.”36
From the onset of his presidency, Bourguiba relied entirely on a state-led socialist
system that initially instilled great support from the Tunisian people. However,
Bourguiba’s policies vested in self-sufficiency were only capable of salvaging economic
growth for about two decades before Tunisia, like the majority of its regional
counterparts, was forced to integrate reformist policies amid domestic economic crisis.
By the end of the 1970s, the impressive record of economic growth and early optimism of
the state’s ability to manage economic development had dissipated, and was replaced
instead by realizations that a number of structural flaws marked the economy.37 This
political malaise had a profound impact on the government’s uncontested political
authority, causing oppositional groups to form official parties and spurred new
independence for trade unions. The prosperous system of socialism became reinterpreted
as a bitter memory of abuse and fraud, underlying a clear rupture in the social contract
that defined the relationship between the state and civil society.38
Following pressures from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to reconfigure
his vision of modernization and state-led development, Bourguiba reluctantly lifted
subsidies on bread and other dietary staples, causing prices to double within a week. The
effects were profound, generating riots across the country and forced police into the
streets to quell the dissent, resulting in the deaths of 150 Tunisians. Remembered as the
January 1984 Bread Revolt, these protests foreshadowed the eventual fate of the
36 Interview (3.5.24). 37 Hermassi, Abdelbaki, “Socio-economic Change and Political Implications: the Maghreb,” in Ghassan Salamé, ed., Democracy Without Democrats? The Renewal of Politics in the Muslim World. I.B. Tauris Publishers: London, 1994, p. 233. 38 Ibid, p. 235.
21
country’s authoritarian system, as they were spontaneous, mostly driven by students and
unemployed youth, and originated in the disenfranchised south and southwest parts of the
country. The violence spread within two weeks to the rest of the country and integrated
professional unions and politicized groups, expanding the platform from economic
grievances to issues like corruption, nepotism, authoritarian politics and regime
incompetence.39 The crackdown continued for weeks until President Bourguiba
reintroduced the subsidies and announced an expansion of the social welfare net in
response to the on-going demonstrations.40
The state’s tight control and centralization of the economy, coupled with strong
state-business relations enabled it to weather the adjustments of the 1980s. In particular,
new policies centered on restructuring and readjusting private sector relationships
represented a shift where the Tunisian government chose to respond to unavoidable
exigencies following what Hermassi cites as a reconceptualization of the role of the state
stemming from a new global logic that narrowed the scope of economic intervention by
local governments during this time period.41
Pratt notes that a period of inevitable liberalization within the economy followed
this uncomfortable period of economic austerity. Specifically in Tunisia, reactionary
reforms to damper the country’s economic crisis consisted of reductions in government
spending, increased interest rates and a devaluation of the Tunisian Dinar, as
recommended by the IMF and World Bank.42 However, the IMF adjustments that
39 Pratt, Nicola. Democracy & Authoritarianism in the Arab World. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2007, p. 92. 40 Posusney, Marsha Pripstein and Angrist, Michele Penner. Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2005, p. 51. 41 Hermassi, pp. 230-231. 42 Pratt, p. 92.
22
literally changed the banking system overnight into one that responded to, rather than
dominated market forces by allocating credit, was still highly regulated by the Tunisian
Central Bank. This type of oversight was possible even in times of economic hardship
because of Bourguiba’s personality cult that perpetuated an image of the central state as a
“monument without cracks43” that could continue to handle the burden of economic
stabilization from the top-down, similar to the successful socialist policies enacted under
his initial years in the presidency.44 Furthermore, the severity of the crisis made state
officials reluctant to relent control over pivotal components of the economic structure,
which in the long-run proved beneficial to the regime, as it was able to retain a
substantial degree of certainty when predicting economic outcomes.45
By the mid 1980s, the government had reconfigured its authoritarian structure to a
coalition of state officials, top security officials, military officers and private-property
owners, marking an “official” diversion from the socialist economic model by ushering in
major economic reforms shortly before Bourguiba’s oust from power. Local
businessmen responded favorably to the regime’s new economic path, which provided
them more leverage than they had ever seen since independence, and inspired “greater
confidence” in the government to promote an economic environment more suitable to the
interests of the private sector.46 The first enterprises to be privatized were hotels and
commercial establishments, followed by larger industrial and transportation companies.47
43 Henry, Clement M., “Political Economies of the Maghreb,” in David S. Sorenson, ed., Interpreting the Middle East: Essential Themes. Westview Press: A Member of the Perseus Books Group: Boulder, 2010, p. 196. 44 Ibid. 45 Lawson, Fred H., “Intraregime Dynamics, Uncertainty, and the Persistence of Authoritarianism in the Contemporary Arab World.” in Oliver Schlumberger, ed., Debating Arab Authoritarianism: Dynamics and Durability in Nondemocratic Regimes. Stanford University Press: Stanford, 2007, p. 125. 46 Ibid., p. 124. 47 Pratt, p. 97.
23
Bourguiba’s socialism experiment failed to endure beyond the early 1980s and led
to higher rates of poverty and higher living costs. The aforementioned “social contract”
that had been implemented years earlier could no longer be sustained at the behest of the
government, even though it continued to practice exclusionary politics. The elites that
surrounded the regime however grew richer during this time, having reaped the benefits
of an economy that had been forced to privatize following the government’s retraction
from private industry. This economic imbalance, contingent mainly on one’s association
to the government, angered the population and increased frustrations over the status
quo.48
In 1987, Bourguiba issued an unsettling decree (probably under diminished
capacity) ensuring that he would remain “President for Life,” officially shattering the
hopes for democratization, but unofficially contingent on his ability to sustain his
deteriorating socialist contract balancing state welfare and services with society’s
disengagement from politics. The series of economic crises that swept the greater Arab
World in the 1980s had a devastating effect in Tunisia and hampered the government’s
ability to maintain its end of the bargain, prompting occasional demonstrations against
flawed economic policies, citing government incompetence and demands for greater
political liberalization. However, despite new fiscal restrictions, Bourguiba’s
government remained resilient largely by maintaining subsidies on essential staples and
continuing to endorse critical social services.49 Furthermore, the emergence of any viable
opposition to Bourguiba was unlikely, given the personality cult that he had developed
48 Interview (5.5.25). 49 Hermassi, p. 233.; Ibid., p. 235; Pratt, p. 92.; Brownlee, Jason, “Political Crisis and Restabilization: Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Tunisia,” in Marsha Pripstein Posusney and Michele Penner Angrist, eds., Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2005, p. 51.
24
over his decades at the apex of a Tunisian political system that had been designed to
depend on him. Change appeared inevitable, it was just unclear what that change would
be or when it would occur. “People really understood the sense that something was going
to happen because the economy was down, people were reluctant to invest, there was an
internal struggle in the palace between the president and influential political actors, and
opposition groups – the MTI in particular – were becoming more active and intensifying
their demands for political reform.”50
Sliding Into Dictatorship:
Looking to Bourguiba’s political legacy, tarnished by what occurred in the last two years
of his presidency, it was easy to forget the good things that he had done. He was
considered a dictator who did not allow any opposition to his authority and pursued a
Draconian style of leadership, where anyone who spoke out against him would be put in
jail. Sizable portions of the population had grown dissatisfied with his unwavering,
extreme policies toward religion and discredited his initial promises to nurture democracy
and encourage participatory politics.51 One participant recalled that discontent over
Bourguiba’s dramatic crackdown on political freedom had become so widespread in
Tunisian society that people were looking forward to the “big party” that the country
would throw after Bourguiba died, which appeared to be the only way that a political
transition would ever.52
An Enemy in Islamists:
50 Interview (17.6.2). 51 Interview (17.6.2).; Interview (7.5.27). 52 Interview (11.5.30).
25
For the country’s leading Islamist party the MTI, failures of Bourguiba’s modernization
project further supported its efforts to demand reform to what it considered an
unsustainable and deteriorating political system. Following various demonstrations and
riots organized by the MTI in the mid-1980s, the group became the epicenter of dissent,
which led the regime to arrest and suppress the group by force. However, Bourguiba’s
response only empowered the MTI, and amplified its stature to “the best organized and
most politically influential” opposition group in Tunisian politics.53 And despite the
crackdown, the MTI maintained a dominant presence in the Tunisian political arena.
Participants confirmed Bourguiba’s partially irrational fears over the Islamist
threat, noting that “Bourguiba wanted to kill Islamists” at the end of his reign.54
Members of the contemporary Ennahda party (formerly MTI) highlighted the group’s sad
history under Bourguiba’s presidency, explaining how the MTI’s first petition to get a
license to operate legally in 1981 as a political party had been ignored by the government,
and that most of the group’s leadership had been forced into corrupt state trials that
resulted in harsh judicial decisions.55 In 1987, the MTI had a second major confrontation
with Bourguiba following the group’s more radical approach to contest the government’s
oppression, by demonstrating in the streets and taking part in what Ennahda leadership
described as “objectionable activity,” such as the use of violence.56 The interesting
observation to highlight about the MTI is that its members, like many oppositional groups
that operated under Bourguiba and eventually Ben Ali, were cognizant of the
consequences their actions would carry. Even though they frequently intended to accept
53 Brownlee, p. 52. 54 Interview (16.6.1). 55 Interview (13.5.31). 56 Ibid.
26
the regime and operate under a corrupted ruled of law that privileged the president, they
were persistently rebuffed for obscure, malicious purposes.
Failing Health:
Bourguiba’s presidential decree that ensured he would remain president until his death
severely impacted his popularity and legitimacy among most Tunisians, who knew his
health had been deteriorating. Many questioned whether he was actually becoming senile
and whether he was still the actual decision-maker in the Palais in Carthage. His age,
indications that he was being irrationally stimulated by various tendencies (Islamists,
elites, the IFI’s), and the fact that he had even entertained the idea of being president for
life confirmed to the country that he had become senile.57 One interviewee shared a story
about a personal interaction he had with Bourguiba during the former president’s final
years in office. Just months before the political transition occurred, he met Bourguiba
and recalled that he was very ill. He said that Bourguiba had absolutely no idea what was
happening around him. The participant noted that he had to undergo an extensive
briefing on how to interact with Bourguiba prior to meeting him that covered things like
how to shake his hand (which at that time required that the guest lift Bourguiba’s hand
off the table and place it down again) and what to do if he wanted to kiss you. The whole
experience produced something of a sad irony when considering the nature of such a
powerful regime, and the dying old man that controlled it.58
57 Interview (5.5.25). 58 Interview (11.5.30).
27
The Tunisian people did not dislike Bourguiba despite all of the negatives that can
be attributed to his presidency, but that they had grown bored59 and were just “fed up”
with him. “People wanted him to just give up and gracefully relinquish power.”60 Given
the widespread agreement that the interviewees shared with this particular source’s view,
it is not surprising that the change they had all been anxiously awaiting did eventually
occur; it would be the circumstances under which the transition of power from Habib
Bourguiba to his successor transpired that would be the most intriguing.
“Tagheer al Mubarak” (The Blessed Change):
The downfall of Habib Bourguiba came to be described as a bloodless “constitutional
health coup;” the resulting “tagheer al mubarak,”61 or “blessed change,” as it was
referred by the Ben Ali regime, confirmed Ben Ali’s rise to the political apex in
November 198762 and tempted prospects for a new chapter in Tunisia’s political history,
which until that time, had been dominated by the former president and closed to any
opposition. The ascension of then prime minister, Ben Ali occurred swiftly through a
“legitimate” coup based on a forced, unanimous endorsement by a board of seven
physicians that concluded Habib Bourguiba’s mental health had deteriorated below the
capacity to hold office – a loophole stipulated in the Tunisian constitution through which
Ben Ali found support for his posturing. Political scientists further attribute the smooth
transition from Bourguiba’s entrenched dictatorship to much welcomed “new blood” that
could improve the country’s poor social and economic conditions.
59 Interview (7.5.27). 60 Interview (17.6.2). 61 Rather than the term inqilaab or “coup” in Arabic 62 Interview (6.5.26).
28
In 1987, Ben Ali assumed the duties of the chief executive of the republic. This
power transition marked an abrupt end to the long and arduous tenure of Bourguiba’s
presidency, and brought to the fore a series of crucial issues to the nation, including:
“demographic changes, unemployment, unequal distribution of resources, economic
stagnation, ossified political structures, Islamic agitation, and promised but persistently
postponed pluralism.”63 The agitation and institutional restrictions likened to
Bourguibism were corrosive influences to the glorified legacy the president had
embodied in his latter years. National dissatisfaction over failing economic policies and
withheld individual freedoms were exacerbated by Bourguiba’s evident physical and
mental deterioration, thus mounting the national support necessary for Ben Ali to assume
the presidency. By no means do onlookers label Ben Ali’s action a “coup de force.” He
remained within his legal mandate as Prime Minister to intervene on Bourguiba’s behalf
as stipulated in the Tunisian constitution, which gave him legitimacy to rule. In his first
presidential speech to the nation on November 7, he discussed themes of unity, continuity
and change that depended heavily on revisions to the constitution and vested
commitments to political pluralism, and reforms to the press and electoral laws. In
hindsight, the most shocking point from his speech highlighted a commitment to combat
corruption, uphold legal procedure and dismiss the lifetime presidency64 – three charges
that would later be brought against him by the nation that supported his political
ascension.
C’est Qui Ben Ali?:
63 Ware, L. B. (1988), “Ben Ali’s Constitutional Coup in Tunisia,” Middle East Journal (1998), 42(4), 587-601, p. 587. 64 Ware, p. 592.
29
At its onset, the impacts of the political transition were relatively uncertain for most
people, not only for the fact that it had occurred so dramatically and without any official
explanation, but also because Ben Ali was a relatively unknown figure who had kept a
very low profile under the Bourguiba presidency. One source confirmed this assessment
by explaining that when Ben Ali assumed power, it was not necessarily a period of
political transition, but rather a medical coup d’état or “changement de palais” (internal
transition via “Palace Revolt”). Since he had been prime minister and part of the former
regime, people presumed that there would not be any dramatic changes to the country’s
politics.65 Another participant jokingly remarked that Ben Ali’s reflection in Tunisian
history as the leader of the “changement” really did not mean anything; for her, it was as
though he had swung in like “Spider-Man” to take over the country.66 Clearly, questions
lingered over who Ben Ali actually was and whether his “interim” as president would
facilitate an anticipated transition to democracy.
Others who were more familiar with Ben Ali from his roles as prime minister, and
chief of national security later questioned his qualifications. Some charged that he lacked
the legitimacy to hold office without national elections and were unsure whether he even
held the credentials to inherit the country’s most powerful office, especially under such
nebulous circumstances. One interviewee recalled her personal shock when it was
revealed that he had never graduated from high school or obtained a legitimate degree.
For years she asked herself, “how could an uncertified man become president of a
country that emphasizes education?”67 She highlighted that even though Bourguiba was
65 Interview (14.6.1). 66 Interview (6.5.26). 67 Ibid.
30
a dictator, he was qualified for the position because he was at least a lawyer.68 Some of
the rhetoric on Ben Ali’s credibility was less skeptical but downright critical; as one
source candidly remarked, there was a big difference between an “educated and cultured
tyrant” (enlightened despot) like Bourguiba and what Ben Ali was – an “ignorant and
illiterate.”69 Others questioned his morality after discovering that he had divorced his
first wife to marry his mistress, Leila Trabelsi.70
A New Savior?:
In Ben Ali’s first speech after assuming office, initial recommendations for political
reform were announced, most importantly, revisions to the constitution to subvert articles
that called for a life presidency and the automatic succession of the prime minister to the
presidential post. He also addressed lingering concerns over the prospects for enhanced
political pluralism in the context of amended electoral and press laws. He amnestied
thousands of political prisoners – including Islamists, changed the death sentences of
several opposition figures to life in prison and invited political exiles to return to
Tunisia.71 Hopes that change was inevitable were incrementally reaffirmed during an
unprecedented period of political contestation that boosted the confidence of senior MTI
leadership and encouraged their participation in elections assured to be absent of coercion
and intimidation.
As his political personality began to evolve, Ben Ali sought to show his
opponents that the secular Tunisian state was not hostile to Islamists and that
68 Ibid. 69 Interview (13.5.31). 70 Interview (6.5.26). 71 Alexander, Christopher. Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghreb. Routledge: New York, 2010, p. 53.
31
reconciliation with them was possible. As a result, he welcomed an array of civic
concessions that were initially perceived to have underscored confidence in his
government, support for his presidency, and challenged external criticisms claiming
legitimacy was only possible through traditional mechanisms of authoritarianism. These
concessions included credible amendments to the penal code, laws pertaining to habeas
corpus, detention and revisions to the State Security Courts. Ben Ali even began to
revitalize previously banned religious institutions and university centers of theology that
had been destroyed by his predecessor. It is apparent now that these “concessions” were
deceptive measures implemented to actually increase the state’s control and supervision
over threatening institutions by incorporating them into “the system” that was designed to
oppress them.
Ben Ali’s initial years in power hosted a relative continuation of the Bourguiba
“one man/one party system” except Ben Ali demonstrated a relinquishing role from the
dictatorship that Bourguiba led by the time he was deposed.72 People welcomed Ben Ali
with a lot of hope because they were thirsty for change. But no one thought about the
kind of person Ben Ali was because they were preoccupied by the prospect of something
new and the impact a change would have on their “increasingly difficult and dull lives.”
Ben Ali embodied the image of a “new savior” to remedy the country’s dilapidated
political, economic and social forums. “Most intellectuals believed he would bring about
good changes, especially since he had promised so many things that had never actually
been available to the people before, like multipartyism, democracy and freedom of
expression.”73 In the first two years, there were remarkable improvements to the
72 Interview (2.5.23). 73 Interview (17.6.2).
32
economy and a more inclusive political scene, which indicated Ben Ali may have been
honest. He welcomed the country’s democratic transition and gave more freedoms to
civil society, media and political parties and promised to organize the country’s first
democratic elections.74 People were happy to see that Ben Ali maintained focus on the
positive achievements of Bourguiba’s presidency, by maintaining a certain openness
towards the West, enforcing security, allowing for a more open economy, encouraging
the growth of the private sector, supporting the code of personal status and continuing to
empower women; “all of that was fine,” according to one interviewee.75 Lack of a
dramatic disruption and in fact, enhancement of Bourguiba’s more favorable policies
probably enabled Ben Ali to inherit the presidency without major social backlash because
he was doing things that people actually wanted, so there was no reason to prematurely
contest his authority until the national elections took place.
Unlike Bourguiba, Ben Ali was a pseudo political elite, which allowed him to
garner support from the “club” of politicians under Bourguiba’s state party for not only
the continuation of Bourguiba’s national policies, but also a continuation of his practice
for political favoritism. As long as there was no disruption to the system of benefits or
political leverage that elites depended on, they were inclined to support Ben Ali and very
likely were responsible for constructing and disseminating Ben Ali’s various policies of
political and civil reform at the time, especially because he appeared to not be the most
intelligent. But he held the seat of power, so “the machine had to work to support him.”
As one participant noted, just like in every Arab country, in Tunisia there was a power
behind Ben Ali’s power (i.e. “shadow government”) that made sure that he stayed there.
74 Interview (7.5.27). 75 Interview (8.5.27).
33
Beyond the support of the former state party’s political cronies, traditional elites, and
even former opposition groups like the MTI76, some participants asserted that the United
States and other external actors played a big role during the political transition because
they supported Ben Ali’s calls for reform.77
Rewriting History to Earn Legitimacy:
Ben Ali relied on other strategies to derive the legitimacy that he initially lacked as
president by revising the country’s education system to perpetuate a new written history
that reflected favorably on his personal achievements and contributions to the country.
Unfortunately for Ben Ali, this also meant that Bourguiba’s unmatched legacy would
have to be officially altered to make Ben Ali appear equally, if not more popular than his
predecessor. “Like all dictators, Ben Ali essentially erased the immediate past that he did
not like,” as one interviewee noted.78 It was apparent that Ben Ali did not have the
charismatic legitimacy of Bourguiba and prompted him to orchestrate a paradigm shift
from Bourguiba’s discourse on history, anti-colonialism, and national liberation, to
reflect new achievements that could be attributed to Ben Ali, like development, economic
growth and political reform.79
Additionally, Ben Ali recognized that Bourguiba’s legacy loomed over his
presidency as a constant rubric to which all of his policies were compared, prompting
him to take extra steps immediately after assuming the presidency to minimize the
significance of Bourguiba’s legacy. Ben Ali’s paranoia from constantly being compared
76 Interview (3.5.24). 77 Interview (6.5.26). 78 Interview (8.5.27). 79 Interview (14.6.1).
34
to the former president escalated to the point where people claimed that they were not
even allowed to say “Bourguiba,” whether in official state media, or even when referring
to landmarks. For example, the major thoroughfare in downtown Tunis, “Avenue Habib
Bourguiba” was normally referred to as “La Rue Principale” (the main road) during Ben
Ali’s presidency.80 One source noted that in 2000, when Bourguiba eventually died, state
owned media was not permitted to broadcast the funeral and people were displeased for
being unable to openly commemorate the life of their first president as a moment in their
national history.81 Tunisians, particularly from older generations, viewed Bourguiba
positively and felt deprived, as though their father had been stolen from them because of
Ben Ali’s concerns over Bourguiba’s popularity; Bourguiba was the only rivaling heroic
figure that could compete with Ben Ali’s authority, even after Bourguiba died.82 Ben Ali
enforced a national admiration for a new generation of heroes who brought change in
1987 and saved the country from Bourguiba’s dictatorship, according to some
interviewees.83 Ben Ali’s attempts to erase the history of Bourguiba represented a clear
attempt at reconfiguring the personality cult that Bourguiba had constructed as a means
of ensuring his own longevity and unconditional support.84
Tunisia’s “Renaissance:”
As time progressed, the parameters of Tunisian history were dramatically altered to
indiscriminately erase everything that occurred prior to 1987. Interviewees explained
that a “rebirth” of history followed Ben Ali’s coup, and that 1987 represented a distinct
80 Interview (16.6.1). 81 Ibid. 82 Interview (17.6.2) 83 Interview (8.5.27). 84 Interview (6.5.26).
35
shift in history that was used as a redline for comparison of historic data and statistics.
Ben Ali’s government was systematically juxtaposed to the government of Bourguiba,
generating a “before and after” indicator that always favored what happened after Ben
Ali assumed the presidency. Interviewees noted that there is no way to tell whether this
information was accurate, or if it had simply been fabricated to support Ben Ali’s claims
to his legitimacy.85 One source noted that through conversations with her family, she
eventually recognized that everything she had been taught in school about Ben Ali had
been a form of propaganda.86
Conclusion:
Many viewed Ben Ali’s “constitutional coup” as a sham, orchestrated by an opportunist
intent on inheriting the Bourguiba dictatorship, not transforming it. Ben Ali was simply
performing for an eager audience, but probably knew that his legitimacy would always be
questioned and forced him to sustain his progressive and authoritative image at whatever
costs.87 After a couple of years, it became obvious that the system was becoming more
repressive than it had been under Bourguiba and that many of the individual freedoms
that had been promised were not only being unfulfilled but were actually being limited
further than they had been in the past.88 People quickly realized that the cult of
personality had returned when Ben Ali took over; one participant noted that he was happy
to see that the towering images of Bourguiba had been taken down to close that chapter
on Tunisia’s period of dictatorship, but no sooner were they replaced with those of Ben
85 Interview (16.6.1). 86 Interview (6.5.26). 87 Interview (14.6.1).; Interview (10.5.30). 88 Interview (3.5.24).
36
Ali. Ben Ali’s regime was showing signs that his presidency would also be extensive,
and even more corrupt than Bourguiba’s had ever been.89
It is clear now that the regime’s longevity and the consecration of a rigid
authoritarian apparatus represented the ultimate end goals for Ben Ali and discredits the
perceived contrast to Bourguiba, given the extensive period of dictatorship and repression
that ensued within just years after his coup. Brownlee’s short but valuable assessment of
Ben Ali’s constitutional coup rationalizes the continuation of an authoritarianism that
simply passed from “one personalistic leader to another.”90 There is a clear
disassociation with the significance attributed to the regime’s change in leadership at the
most fundamental levels, since the regime’s survival and re-stabilization required only a
minimal change within the regime’s elite (prime minister to president). This “shallow”
transition as he describes, highlighted potentially threatening consequences for a regime
ill-prepared for domestic opposition. Brownlee asserts that the penetration of civil and
security soft-liners was directly responsible for the removal of Bourguiba; however, their
inability to work together failed to turn power over to the regime’s opposition. Rather, it
was reshuffled from within, and worked to the opportunistic advantages of Ben Ali.91
89 Interview (5.5.25). 90 Brownlee, p. 50. 91 Ibid.
37
CHAPTER 2
KEEPING PEOPLE OUT OF POLITICS: BEN ALI’S AUTHORITARIAN
MODEL
“Outwardly, Tunisians had a country that had all the ingredients necessary to produce a
democracy. They had all of the institutions that were necessary and had reinforced those
institutions, plus we had a strong economy and a beautiful education system…democracy
should have been an easy next step.”92
Scholars would agree that the Tunisian case had long been a surprising example of stalled
democracy, challenging hopeful prospects that it had great potential for democratization
as early as the 1960s, given the country’s openness, orientation to progressive social
policies, and educated Western-elite. These features normally bode well for a democratic
trajectory, and in the democratization literature, Tunisia possesses textbook
characteristics conducive to political pluralism and competitive elections. However,
Habib Bourguiba’s reliance on socialist economics and overbearing interventionism by
the public sector coupled with gradual strides toward privatization were considerable
hindering mechanisms to cultivating inclusive politics. In times of political and
economic hardship, Tunisians had been conditioned to rely on government intervention to
restore order and prosperity. However, when Tunisia’s “bulky” civil society became too
powerful, the state maintained an arsenal of countervailing measures to revive its
dominant authority. In contrast to the entrenched authoritarian practices of his
predecessor, Ben Ali entered the Tunisian presidency with a reform agenda, specifically 92 Interview (17.6.2).
38
to establish the “rule of law, to respect human rights, and to implement the kind of
democratic political reforms that Habib Bourguiba had steadfastly refused,”93 compelling
many to question the subsequent political devolution that ensued as the regime matured.
Ultimately, Ben Ali’s initial promises were suspicious and caused many to view
prospects for political reform with skepticism. Scholars have examined the country’s
constitutional transition by looking at the nature of the regime rather than the leader, and
note that it became very clear that the entrenched authoritarian regime constructed by
Habib Bourguiba had actually remained; it was just inherited by a new personalistic
leader. Ben Ali’s gradual internal restructuring of the Bourguiba regime was the ultimate
consequence of this misstep, which systematically accounted for previous vulnerabilities
and ultimately prevented room for opposition, at least for a while. Clearly, the regime
never lacked a deficit in the political oppression needed to prolong its authority in the
Tunisian political system, prompting many to question the events of December 2010, and
the subsequent downfall of what had been considered one of the most robust authoritarian
regimes in contemporary history.
The “National Pact:”
Political opposition and the international community quickly championed Ben Ali’s calls
for multipartyism at the behest of a formal “National Pact” for political pluralism and
liberalization that ultimately graduated into nothing more than illusory posturing, where
fundamental continuities were simply being masked by surface modifications to authentic
93 Alexander, Christopher. “Authoritarianism and Civil Society in Tunisia,” Middle East Research and Information Project. http://www.merip.org/mer/mer205/alex.htm/. Accessed on 12.16.2011.
39
reform.94 However, at the time of its unveiling, the National Pact was a groundbreaking
development in the Tunisian political system. Specifically, it laid out broad principles to
attract as many constituencies as possible to a new “presidential majority” but also
institutionalized substantive economic and politic bargains. It incorporated language that
strongly emphasized “traditions of loyal competition” and encouraged differing opinions
that signified neither sedition nor division. Alexander describes the importance of this
conscious focus on the language that dominated Ben Ali’s first year as president, with its
emphasis on values and broader principles of democracy and national unity. It was clear
that the interests of the collective took precedence over any individual reflecting a far
more liberal democratic discourse in favor of multiple parties, competitive elections,
gender equality, and freedoms of expression and the rule of law. However, he also notes
that the new Tunisian government had taken the “wind out of the sails” of the Tunisian
people by translating messages of unity and historically fragmented leadership into
submission, leaving them to applaud rather than challenge the regime.95 Nevertheless,
the National Pact was signed by 16 political parties and organizations and encouraged
democratic participation, while also reaffirming the government’s support for the Code of
Personal Status, respect for human rights, and freedoms of expression and association.96
Ben Ali’s initial years in power added further momentum to the positive trajectory
toward liberalization. As outlined in the previous chapter, the new leader saw himself as
the “dedicated reformer” by embarking on an aggressive campaign to restructure the
Tunisian government and support initial promises to augment individual liberties.
94 Alexander, Christopher. Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghreb. Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group: London, 2010, p. 52. 95 Ibid, p 54. 96 Ibid, p 53.
40
This “National Pact” (mithaq) extended by invitation from the president to
oppositional forces initially represented a starting point for discussions reflecting many of
the lingering shortcomings from the Bourguiba era and covering broader topics like,
“national identity, the political system, economic development, and foreign policy.
Although the Islamists (initially represented under the MTI) were invited to participate,
they were not one of the six signatory parties to the final product, which ultimately aimed
to prepare for “a more elaborate corporatist formula with a growing pluralist potential.”97
Allani notes that despite the Islamists’ support for his new regime, Ben Ali approached
the idea of movement legalization warily. The MTI therefore underwent a gradual
integration into the new political arena while undertaking several provisions, which
included amongst others, acceptance of the “Choura” (consultation) of the modern
political regime, and a marginal shift in their religious platform. The movement was
renamed “Ennahda” or “Renaissance” party to remove a religious pretext from its name
at the insistence of the regime.98 However, despite Ennahda’s willingness to accept the
terms for competitive democracy laid out by the regime, Ben Ali never legalized the
party.99
Thus, even though the National Pact appeared to respond to the oppositions’ calls
for multiparty politics under Ben Ali’s presidency, it became apparent that it functioned
primarily as an illusory structural change, part of an eclectic selection of surface
modifications that masked a devious agenda. As Lisa Anderson clarified in her second
attempt to explain it, “virtually all the signatories of the pact represented dependencies of
97 Pratt, Nicola. Democracy & Authoritarianism in the Arab World. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2007, p. 94. 98 Allani, Alaya. “The Islamists in Tunisia Between Confrontation and Participation 1980-2008,” The Journal of North African Studies (2009), 14(2), 257-272, p. 263. 99 Alexander, Middle East Research and Information Project.
41
the perennial ruling party, far from a compromise or bargain among equals, the pact was
an effort to create the appearance of political pluralism in the absence of political actors
with autonomous social and economic power.”100 Ben Ali’s attempt to temporarily
appease the disgruntled MTI and its supporters is now viewed as the primary motivation
for introducing the National Pact through what has been described as a “strategic ploy”
constructed to buy enough time for him to stabilize his own position of authority.101 As
described by a member of Ennahda, after being imprisoned by Bourguiba in 1984 the
Islamists supported Ben Ali’s rise to power, and in 1988 applauded his call to give every
ideology – even the Islamists – the right to form a party.102
In his first speech to the nation, Ben Ali reinforced his reformist image by
including a Qu’ranic verse demonstrating solidarity with Tunisia’s Muslim population
and potentially, an extended hand of acceptance to the participation of political Islamists
who had long been considered enemies of the state.103 This gesture was particularly
positive for the MTI, which had consistently advocated nonviolent political reform and
highlighted the failures of Bourguiba’s insufficient economic reforms and inability to
meet the peoples’ needs. And although Ben Ali also targeted Islamists during his tenure
in the Bourguiba administration, working to quell the MTI opposition in response to anti-
government riots and university rallies organized by the party, it became clear that
Bourguiba’s concerns over the fate of the “best organized and politically influential”
100 Anderson, Lisa. “Politics in the Middle East: Opportunities and Limits in the Quest for Theory,” in M. Tessler, Jodi Nachtwey and Anna Banda, eds., Area Studies and Social Science: Strategies for Understanding Middle East Politics. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1999, p. 4. 101 Brownlee, Jason, “Political Crisis and Restabilization: Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Tunisia,” in Marsha Pripstein Posusney and Michele Penner Angrist, eds., Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2005, p. 53. 102 Interview (10.5.30). 103 Ware, L. B. “Ben Ali’s Constitutional Coup in Tunisia,” Middle East Journal (1998), 42(4), 587-601, p. 592.
42
opposition leaders outweighed the economic strife at the source of discontent prompting
Ben Ali to rethink Bourguiba’s ineffective strategy. The unrelenting encouragement for
further demonstrations by the MTI was likely a primary motivation for the constitutional
coup. Promises for reform indicated that a rapprochement of sorts was possible in Ben
Ali’s new pluralistic Tunisia and garnered widespread support from across the country
for what appeared to be legitimate calls for change.104 Ben Ali was also cognoscente of
the potential domestic and international ramifications that could arise in the wake of a
deliberate assault against the MTI, given their popular support across Tunisia and the
overwhelming backlash that could destabilize his new and fragile government. As
Christopher Alexander points out, even if these predicable domestic tensions did not
emerge through the outward suppression of MTI opposition, the prolonged domestic
rumblings would certainly have frightened potential international investors in the
Tunisian economy and would diminish the government’s ability to negotiate favorable
loans and risked meddling by neighboring rabble-rousers in the region, thus solidifying
Ben Ali’s priorities to reach out to secular opposition and secure his popular support at
least temporarily.105
What many perceived was a genuine effort by Ben Ali to respond favorably to
popular demands for pluralism, eroded to a malicious sham, foreshadowing the ever-
present deception and dishonesty that would plague the Tunisian political system over the
next twenty years. Interviewees acknowledged that after about two years, the country slid
into dictatorship, evidenced first by Ben Ali’s persecution of the Islamists. Subsequently
the regime selected and targeted other groups, including political opposition sympathetic
104 Brownlee, p. 52. 105 Alexander, Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghrib, p. 53.
43
to Islamists, then journalists, “then eventually everyone became terrorized by the
regime.”106 Lawson notes that despite perceived strides towards liberalization in its early
years, “the forces that made up Tunisia’s dominant coalition remained oriented towards
maximizing certainty with regard to outcomes.” He cites the “package of reforms” that
were introduced at the start of Ben Ali’s presidency, and the state’s revamped
Rassemblement Constitutionnel Démocratique (RCD) party as a dominant force in the
country’s 1989 elections (discussed below) as examples that reflected not only the
intentions of the president himself as many observers claim, but the force of intraregime
interaction. Thus, policies favorable to the regime were a direct result of state officials’
disinterest in foreseeing an alternative outcome in support of any opposition. This
apprehensiveness to change was even shared by the newly formed political parties, which
“remained uncertain about the limits to political freedom under the new regime, leading
them to exercise considerable self-restraint.”107
The National Pact and the country’s first elections (which would subsequently be
followed by elections of similar farce) cemented an inherent truth about the country’s
political environment that lasted throughout its duration, in which every part of the
system that Ben Ali built ended up being fake, almost as though the government were
content with perpetuating the image that its tourist brochures generated. The regime
successfully skirted the country’s rapid transformation from dictatorship, to what many
106 Interview (2.5.23). 107 Lawson, Fred H. “Intraregime Dynamics, Uncertainty, and the Persistence of Authoritarianism in the Contemporary Arab World.” in Oliver Schlumberger, ed., Debating Arab Authoritarianism: Dynamics and Durability in Nondemocratic Regimes. Stanford University Press: Stanford, 2007, pp. 126-127.
44
describe as a totalitarian state – reliant on propaganda to highlight its apparent modernity,
its apparent democratic principles, and its apparent rule of law.108
Authoritarian Elections:
Elections offered some solace to the failures of the National Pact and were viewed as a
critical mechanism to following through with initial commitments to democracy.
Excitement within the population to participate in meaningful elections demonstrated a
major step forward in Tunisia’s history; however, revelations that yet another
authoritarian dictator had occupied the presidency were confirmed by the inconceivable
results, which revealed that the state’s RCD party had captured all of the seats in
Parliament. Besides coercively manipulating the ballot box and preventing transparent
vote monitoring, scholars attribute this implausible outcome to a specific form of
electoral rigging. Posusney explains the Tunisian elections as a “plurality-based,
multimember system” known as the “party-block vote,” where citizens cast votes for a
single party; the highest number of votes received by a party wins all of the seats in the
district under this system. The regime was capable of manipulating the outcomes of
elections with relative ease when considering the winner-take-all characteristic of the
voting system, which discounted the possibility that any opposition would obtain seats in
Parliament if the regime claimed majorities throughout the country.109 Despite
opposition pressures for revisions in favor of proportional legislative elections, the
elections that eventually took place in 1989 maintained the former majority list system in
108 Interview (16.6.1). 109 Posusney, Marsha Pripstein. “Multiparty Elections in the Arab World: Election Rules and Opposition Responses,” in Marsha Pripstein Posusney and Michele Penner Angrist, eds., Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2005, p. 102.
45
favor of the RCD. Failure to reach significant gains on the political front compounded by
reemerging media restrictions disadvantaged the RCD’s fledging opposition led to the
RCD’s sweep of every seat in the National Assembly.110 One interviewee highlighted
that it had been very clear to the Tunisian people that the results of the first elections
were changed, “maybe because they were not acceptable to Ben Ali, which perhaps
explains why he changed his politics to become a dictator.”111 Another participant agreed
that the results had been changed. Beyond the obvious absurdity that Ben Ali had won
99.9% of the vote, the interviewee said the regime had voted on her behalf because she
received a registration voting card in the mail that she had never asked for, which in her
words, “revealed the results of the elections before they had even occurred.” Under Ben
Ali’s regime, even people who had died voted.112
The benefit of hindsight indicates now that Ben Ali was in fact not building a
truly competitive democracy, but laying the foundations for a pseudo democratic system
that came to be defined as “consensual democracy,” or “a political order that allowed a
bit more freedom to express opinions and to organize within boundaries drawn and
defined by the state.”113 Ben Ali described this new type of democracy just three years
after his ascension to power, noting clearly how the state was responsible for outlining
the foundations and limiting the parameters around which competition and dialogue
could occur within the state-supported RCD party. This variation of liberalization did
ease tensions and allowed for freer expression of opinion, but also facilitated access to
the RCD to gather information, enacted a system of favoritism, enabled the swift
110 Alexander, Middle East Research and Information Project. 111 Interview (16.6.1). 112 Interview (5.5.25). 113 Alexander, Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghrib, p. 54.
46
cooptation of regime supporters, and targeted dissidents. Ultimately this structure aimed
to help Ben Ali and the RCD rule more effectively and never sought to provide a
framework for democratic elections that would one day remove them from power. And it
was not long before these deceptive motives of the regime were revealed.
Over the next 20 years, the Ben Ali regime did not demonstrate any genuine
commitment to fully opening the system to contestation in any of the subsequent
elections it held, thus prompting onlookers to question the motivations behind them.
Rigging elections represents one of several strategies pursued by authoritarian regimes to
consolidate and impose their legitimacy. In this particular case study, Ben Ali recognized
his fragile hold on power prior to introducing a roadmap for elections and considered
their utility as an integral means of support for his leadership, which remained somewhat
controversial considering his non-traditional rise to power. Similarly, his authority had
yet to be publicly legitimized in front of the international community and specifically,
Tunisia’s democratic allies. However, as demonstrated by this example, the holding of
elections under authoritarian regimes functions solely to reinforce the regime’s durability
and penetration of the state. The results are irrelevant, often yielding exceptionally high
numbers in favor of the regime’s party to demonstrate fabricated, unrelenting support for
the status quo and a disinterest in visible opposition.
However, even Ben Ali’s regime could not perpetually claim sweeping victories
in every election without risking a backlash of public criticism. Thus, the regime
reconfigured its strategy by agreeing to concessions with pre-approved political parties
sanctioned in the National Pact, to proportionally allocate opposition seats in the 1994
elections. Although this compromise represents some flexibility on the part of the regime
47
and a willingness to entertain the idea of liberalization, this strategy was simply cosmetic
in nature, intent on perpetuating a new image of political inclusiveness and cooperation.
Although the opposition may have marginally benefited from this deal (legally assured to
procure twelve percent of the seats in parliament) the regime became more durable and
less legitimate by simply choosing to oppose “something.” Furthermore, the deal posed
no threats to the regime’s durability, since the remaining seats were contested under the
same system for elections held in 1989. Again, the multi-party block system favored the
RCD, which won all of the contestable seats.114 This proportional percentage was
expanded to 20 percent following accusations of fraud and vote coercion in 1999 for the
very same reasons the rules of the game were altered in 1994. Michele Penner notes that
in addition to offering an aura of legitimacy to the RCD’s power, “the entry of self-
admittedly weak opposition into the parliament served Ben Ali’s purpose by fostering
tighter discipline among the RCD delegates,”115 and provokes important insight to the
effects that elections have on the internal dynamics of authoritarian regimes.
In the 1999 parliamentary elections, which also coincided with a contested
presidential race, the regime responded dramatically to opposition demands for
“representation at the ballot counting and an independent, national group of election
supervisors.” Additionally, Posusney notes that some press restrictions were lifted, and
pro-government rallies outside of polling stations, normally used to pressure voters, were
prohibited.116 In the country’s 2004 elections, oppositional participation was still
tolerated under the same guidelines designed by the RCD, which reproduced the expected
domination of the RCD in parliament.
114 Posusney, p. 102. 115 Ibid. 116 Ibid, pp. 102-103.
48
Sadiki uses the results of parliamentary and presidential elections under the
regime as evidence that “highlights Ben Ali’s predilection for omnipresence and
singularity in playing the role of Tunisia’s new national mentor.”117 Angrist notes that In
1999, the president ran “opposed” by two handpicked candidates for the first time to
claim his third and theoretically last term in office. The two men who were “selected” by
the regime were not considered presidential, and neither had volunteered their candidacy.
More reasonable oppositional candidates who had previously demonstrated an interest in
challenging Ben Ali were prevented from running. The landslide victories in favor of
Ben Ali and his RCD party clearly show that the motivations for holding elections were
less driven by a new precedent of the regime’s tolerance for contestation, but rather, for
making a very public show of Ben Ali’s political predominance.118 Thus, when
considering the preceding data, discussing the possibility for viable contestation in
Tunisia’s organized elections is not serious.119 Angrist echoes this point: “the ruling
party’s preponderant political position and electoral rules confer advantage on large
parties” and enabled the RCD to monopolize the legislature,120 regardless of the regime’s
inclination to allow oppositional participation. Furthermore, over-analyzing the
significance of the parliament as a vessel for substantive political change is a misstep to
begin with.
Angrist highlights that the presence of oppositional candidates in the country’s
parliament was insignificant, given the body’s systemic subordination as a political
117 Sadiki, Larbi. “Engendering Citizenship in Tunisia: Prioritizing Unity over Democracy,” in Yahia Zoubir and Haizam Amirah-Fernandez, eds., North Africa: Politics, Region, and the Limits of Transformation. Routledge Taylor & Francis Group: London, 2008, p. 123. 118 Angrist, Michele Penner. “Whither the Ben Ali Regime in Tunisia?” in Bruce Maddy-Weitzman and Daniel Zisenwine, eds., The Maghrib in the New Century: Identity, Religion, and Politics. University Press of Florida: Gainesville, 2007, p. 177. 119 Sadiki, p. 123. 120 Angrist, p. 176.
49
institution. Parliament lacked the authority to initiate legislation and could not check the
authority of the executive branch, which embodied the real seat of political power. The
nature of the “approved” opposition parties further downgraded the political mobility of
the institution. These parties were often very small, under-funded, and had no real
resonance across Tunisian society. Therefore, the fabricated political forum that was “the
parliament” and the elections that determined how the RCD’s distribution would shift
within the ninetieth percentile, underscored an unfortunate reality: “weak opposition
parties holding a small minority of seats in a weak legislative institution…do not add up
to serious advances in political pluralism.”121
The lessons learned from this cursory overview of Ben Ali’s Tunisia’s history of
elections yields a disturbing realization to the prescribed gestures of political transition
that had been so fundamental to Ben Ali’s early platform. As Sadiki underscores to the
contrary, “the only transition [was] from single-party rule to ruling-party hegemony,” a
frightening by product of an elaborately designed system of elections fixed to
predetermined outcomes in favor of the state.122 Thus, electoral politics in the Tunisian
example have been about “returning the incumbents to a monopoly of political power”
through a course of action by which the regime continued to “possess the democratic
process [by] employing bureaucratic-corporatist strategies.”123 This assessment
contributes to previous discussions pertinent to strategies of democratization that enhance
regime legitimacy. According to Sadiki, the regime more or less “appropriated and
employed all state resources to reproduce itself without much serious competition.” He
adds that the potential for democracy was remiss under the leadership of a president who
121 Ibid. 122 Sadiki, p. 121. 123 Ibid., pp. 121-122.
50
alone had been deciding “the pace, scope and spheres of reform” to the political
system.124
Rassemblement Constitutionnel Démocratique (RCD):
What quickly evolved into the life-force and epicenter of Ben Ali’s dictatorship was the
revamped state-led RCD party, representing a clear parallel with Bourguiba’s emphasis
on state-party politics (led previously by the Neo Destour Party). Ben Ali ascended to the
presidency with an interest in changing the status quo, by anchoring the “monolithic
machinery” of the RCD as an entrenched institution of the state, just shrouded by a
“jibbah125” of democracy. It is argued that the RCD had been constructed as a ruling
party, and never intended to be a competitor among equals in the opposition. In other
words, Ben Ali had never intended to separate the party from the state; rather, it had been
consecrated as a means to fulfill two functions: to “serve as a unifying force and a vehicle
of stability,” signaling both a top-down approach to democratization and echoing
Bourguiba’s self-indulgent approach to unifying, stabilizing and edifying the masses at
the expense of viable political forces and identities.126
The RCD’s penetration and impressive swallowing of Tunisian society marked it
as a force to be reckoned with for competitors who participated in major political
occasions. The party, “significantly boasted almost a quarter of the country’s university
lecturers. The number of students who declared official membership rose from just a few
hundred in 1987, to 8,000 in 1995.”127 The RCD boasted that two million members were
124 Ibid., p. 122. 125 Traditional Tunisian garment. 126 Sadiki, p. 122. 127 Ibid.
51
officially registered in the party in January 2011, equating to one fifth of the total
population of Tunisia. Many charge that this number is excessively inflated and speaks
to the malignant characteristics of the nation’s political system, where citizens were often
coerced into joining the party ranks by harassment and direct threats. The RCD ruled
Tunisia by dominating the political, social and economic lives of Tunisians for decades, a
sentiment shared by interviewees who acknowledged that “few people were involved
with political life, and for those who were, it was by joining the RCD.”128 The party
thrived by advertising “cheap propaganda” that highlighted its apparent overwhelming
support within the country (traced from largely deceptive sources) and by deriving
legitimacy for its historic legacy as a liberating force under French colonial rule.129
Essentially, the idea of the modern “state” as a political entity had been replaced by a
full-fledged authoritarian state, which functioned under the framework of an RCD party
that compelled popular allegiance.130
Politicians – “A Necessary Evil:”131
The blame that is attributed directly to the president’s policies reflects the elites and party
members that supported his authority. Lack of freedom of expression and political
victimization had come from the hands of the country’s own government officials in
government. A non-transparent “shadow government” of politicians operating out of the
palace in Carthage had surrounded Ben Ali but never questioned the politics of the
128 Interview (6.5.26). 129 Dhakouani, Neji Ali. “Tunisia Ruling Party (RCD) and the Road to Democracy.” Nawaat.org. http://nawaat.org/portail/2011/01/20/tunisia-ruling-party-rcd-and-the-road-to-democracy/. Accessed on 12.15.2011. 130 Interview (2.5.23).; Interview (11.5.30). 131 Interview (20.6.3).
52
regime, and instead, worked to “feed the beast” and sustain the regime at the expense of
the nation, according to one source. It became apparent that, even to the small group of
decision-makers who were close to him, that only Ben Ali could have “the good ideas”
and the “puppet ministers” around him never challenged the president’s policies.132 It
was the handful of these elite “yes-men,” Ben Ali’s inner circle, whose wealth and
livelihoods depended on the regime’s survival.133 Participants noted that the elites
betrayed the Tunisian people, by approving laws and protocol across every industry that
served to advantage the ruling family and its supporters, essentially focusing their energy
on devising strategies to funnel the country’s wealth into the hands of the regime through
a sophisticated network of patronage and corruption that will be discussed further in
Chapter 3.134
The Political “Opposition:”
Ben Ali’s legacy of change failed to endure beyond the limits of a pervasive and
delicately crafted apparatus of authoritarian rule that simply relied on unfulfilled
promises for change and institution-building. Many were skeptical over how the leader’s
security background would be appropriate to reversing a highly personalized,
deinstitutionalized and privatized Bourguiba state. As Sadiki indicates, regardless of the
democratic “stirrings” intrinsic to Ben Ali’s rule, the manufacturing of political
community and ethno nationalism in Tunisia eventually returned to historic policies of
exclusivity and singularity and contradict the very democratic tendencies to which Ben
132 Interview (17.6.2). 133 Interview (2.5.23). 134 Interview (6.5.26).
53
Ali alluded during his maiden speech in 1987.135 Sadiki reaffirms many claims mentioned
in this assessment that make it abundantly clear that Ben Ali has consistently been
deciding “the pace, scope, and spheres of reform” since his inception. By the latter half
of the transition period, Tunisia was considered akin to “un commissariat,” a police-state
driven by exaggerated fears and paranoia at the hands of a complex mukhabarat
intelligence network constantly at odds against an alleged “fundamentalist threat” posed
by the country’s cohesive Islamist opposition. One explanation for Ben Ali’s ultimate
“authoritarian bent” laid in the regime’s deep fear over a regional Islamist threat,
sharpened by the turbulent domestic stirrings faced by its western neighbor, leaving many
to consider motivation for regime behavior to have been exogenously driven.136
The ultimate indicator that proved to most onlookers that prospects for change
were farfetched transpired in Ben Ali’s inaction towards demands by domestic opposition
to move forward the date for legislative elections and reform the electoral laws; it would
have been inconsistent with the regime’s liberal rhetoric to maintain a single-party
elected legislature for the slated first four years of Ben Ali’s term under policies of
democratization. The electoral law itself required reform to offer opposition parties a
legitimate chance to gain representation in the National Assembly by winning seats,
rather than the institutionalized “winner-take-all” laws that favored the state’s ruling
party for decades. Ben Ali faced an arduous task of maintaining a “professed
commitment to democratic reform” while also subverting to conservative elements within
the RCD and avoiding a substantial loss of its representation in the National Assembly.
A series of tactful decision-making established the safeguards needed to appease both
135 Sadiki, p. 121. 136 Ibid., p. 123.
54
sides that placated opposition demands, ensured a façade of democratic pursuits and
demonstrated support for the RCD’s hardliners who demanded a healthy majority. The
latter of these arrangements enabled the ruling party to implement a predetermined
formula for calculating oppositional representation in the National Assembly at the
behest of Ben Ali, thereby allowing a guaranteed, but insignificant presence to face an
unbreakable RCD majority.137 In order to project an image centered on pluralism,
democracy and individual expression, the regime tolerated a constructed, décor
opposition, and although Ben Ali was very bothered by the presence of opposition
parties, he reconciled the benefits of at least a semblance of multipartyism in Tunisia.138
He probably saw pluralist democracy as a way to enhance his legitimacy, proving to the
world that democracy existed and that he was chosen by his people139 – and that
opposition groups had some degree of control over his otherwise unrestrained authority.
Domestically, it had been established that he had the ability to quash any threat the
opposition might pose through alternative security or legal mechanisms that made sure
opponents remained confined to limited roles.140
The Cartoon Opposition:141
To address the regime’s need to project an image of diversity and multipartyism certain
opposition parties were permitted to “play the oppositional role” and constructed as part
of a more broad façade portraying a system of political representation.142 Everyone
137 Alexander, Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghrib, pp. 56-57. 138 Interview (17.6.2). 139 Interview (20.6.3). 140 Ibid. 141 Interview (6.5.26). 142 Interview (11.5.30).
55
acknowledged that the opposition parties that were involved in elections were created by
the regime, because143 even the opposition candidates themselves who participated in
presidential elections would say that they supported Ben Ali.144 One source provided an
excellent assessment of these legal opposition parties, noting that even though they were
definitely puppets, some actually did not even know that they were puppets and believed
that the success of their parties was based on the fact that they were not the RCD. But
they did not understand that their activities were completely controlled and had been kept
within bounds laid out by the regime.145 One interviewee expanded on this assessment
and explained that the regime’s fake opposition parties were ironically more threatening
than the RCD, because their sole function was to perpetuate the legitimacy of the Ben Ali
regime by making it appear pluralistic and democratic regardless of its platform, and they
were rewarded for that support.146 The RCD was at least honest about its operations.
Consequences of Being Part of the “Real” Opposition:
“He instilled great fear by using illegal and immoral methods to threaten those who
challenged his authority by sabotaging peoples’ characters, destroying their homes (and
families), their cars, etc, which prevented people from speaking out, or at the very least,
made them think twice about publishing or speaking out against the regime.”147
Apart from the décor opposition was a more distinct and viable category of political
activists that did challenge the regime, and often suffered severe consequences as a result.
143 Interview (13.5.31). 144 Ibid. 145 Interview (20.6.3). 146 Interview (17.6.2). 147 Interview (10.5.30).
56
Anyone who said what they really thought about the old regime would be oppressed and
threatened. Leaders of official, but illegal political parties were generally not arrested but
would be put under surveillance so the regime could monitor their movements, control
their internet access, ban them from traveling, and inhibit their professional mobility.148
The regime used various tactics to prevent parties from organizing any meetings outside
of their party headquarters (which were typically bugged), and even then, some people
would not be permitted to enter the building.149 There were always obstacles as one
interviewee from the political opposition explained. She would rent a conference room
for a party meeting in a hotel for example, and the regime would cancel the reservation at
the last minute, finding any way to constantly disrupt her party’s activities. With another
example she explained how police would detain party leaders or speakers at party events
for hours to prevent them from attending.150 “Real” opposition parties also suffered from
lack of means or financial support either from within the country or through external
actors because it was “not allowed.” The regime ensured that opposition parties were
perpetually disadvantaged by vandalizing their members’ homes, destroying their cars,
and burning down their offices, among other things.151
Beyond targeting party leadership directly, the regime cut off its resources at their
source by harassing those who supported them. In order to deter potential members from
joining the regime arrested them, contacted their families, and “tried to push them far
from the party.” To the dismay of opposition leaders, the regime very often succeeded.152
If one person joined the opposition, then everyone they would be associated with would
148 Interview (17.6.2). 149 Interview (10.5.30). 150 Interview (17.6.2). 151 Ibid. 152 Interview (10.5.30).
57
be vulnerable to punishment by the regime, which made many reluctant to speak out for
fear that their families or friends would be targeted.153 The regime was known to accuse
aspiring members of bogus charges just for showing an interest in working with an
opposition party. The source recalled an example where two people were imprisoned
following fake trials that had found them guilty of engaging in terrorist activity.154
Parties were eventually prohibited not only on ideological grounds, (i.e. parties
that contradicted the regime’s interests) but also if party leadership did not demonstrate
the adequate level of “courtesy” to the regime. Typically the regime would be more
prone to leave opposition figures alone if they did not publicly slander the Tunisian
government at home or abroad,155 essentially imposing a distorted lese-majesty that
criminalized anything that could be perceived as criticism of Ben Ali, his wife, or her
family.156 In the latter years, the regime grew more paranoid of the potential threats that
the political opposition posed to its authority. Opposition figures were persecuted
directly in the media and were accused of serious crimes like treason or spying as a way
to discredit their messages and reduce their popular support.157 Under a similar tactic
designed to “destroy your enemy from within,” the regime would infiltrate opposition
parties with clandestine elements loyal to the regime. Informants would request to join
the party and play a supportive role in promoting the party’s message for a while, before
eventually revealing information that would be detrimental to the party, perhaps by
publishing information that would give the regime justification to crackdown on the
153 Interview (17.6.2).; Interview (20.6.3). 154 Interview (10.5.30). 155 Interview (17.6.2). 156 Ibid. 157 Interview (7.5.27).
58
party’s activities, or by enticing more loyal and indispensable party members to walk
out.158
Despite their sustained efforts to remain operational, no party (décor or fake) was
able to get their party message across to supporters under the regime because the regime
had enacted measures to prevent access to it. Since the regime had full control over news
vendors throughout the country, rarely could anyone find the oppositional newspapers
that parties published. In order to maintain the image that oppositional parties were being
included in the country’s domestic political forum, the RCD normally would purchase the
bulk of their newspapers to prevent regular citizens from reading them, and in effect,
deliberately sponsored the activities of the opposition to ensure that it survived. Of
course, as one interviewee added, the RCD would not purchase every newspaper to make
it look less obvious that they had complete control over political life. If anyone chose to
purchase the newspapers that remained, she indicated that without a doubt they were
being watched by someone nearby or in many cases, reported to the RCD by the vendor
himself.159 Interviewees indicated that the regime never did any of these things openly
because it did not like to be seen by foreign governments and human rights activists as an
oppressive dictatorship and tried to covertly conduct its campaign against the
opposition.160
When asked how her party remained motivated to continue to function under this
type of oppression one source who had worked in the “real” political opposition stated
that those who chose to challenge the government believed that they had a “duty to
inform and guide the country toward the right path, away from the entrenched behavioral
158 Interview (17.6.2). 159 Ibid. 160 Interview (10.5.30).
59
side-effects of the regime’s legacy.”161 For her, and many of her counterparts, it seemed
unrealistic to assume that their efforts would lead to the removal of Ben Ali directly.
Rather, the motivation they had to stay involved in this perceived unfulfilling and
unrelenting David verses Goliath political game was fed by hopes that the president
would eventually die “because in the Arab world, as she noted, it is God who usually
determines when a leader’s reign comes to an end,” and that the foreseeable political
transition could possibly be influenced by their enduring activism.162
Ben Ali’s “Blank Check:”
Ben Ali’s role in persecuting the Islamists during Bourguiba’s presidency, particularly
during the last few years, was a fact that had been well-known to the Tunisian people
when he took power in 1987. Many acknowledged how his bloodless and non-violent
political transition starkly contrasted with his recent past in support of Bourguiba’s
tyrannical and despotic assault on the increasingly influential Islamists. One source
admitted that people understood that Ben Ali had attempted to diminish his involvement
in Bourguiba’s anti-Islamist campaign, especially as Ben Ali began embarking on his
own repressive crackdown just two years after the coup. He had revealed his true
paranoia over the “Islamist threat” that he had actually exploited as a member of
Bourguiba’s regime and intended to finish the job once he was in charge.163
Initially, the whole political spectrum agreed with Ben Ali because he promised
democracy and “everything you could imagine,” despite his role as “the technician of
repression” during the last five years of Bourguiba’s presidency. Ben Ali was a major
161 Interview (17.6.2). 162 Ibid. 163 Interview (5.5.25).; Interview (13.5.31).
60
contributor to the persecution of political opposition groups under Bourguiba and very
likely climbed the ranks in government by participating in Bourguiba’s witch-hunt.164
The Tunisian people themselves had unknowingly given Ben Ali a “blank check” for
what would eventually become a broad and unforgiving campaign waged initially against
Islamists and leftists that incrementally expanded to include anyone who challenged the
regime’s authority or legitimacy.165 After his ascension to power it looked like he was
just enhancing the security of the country by “dealing with the Islamists or something”
and explains why he received such little social retraction against his persecution of them.
But by the late 1990s and early 2000s, the whole political scene became a “joke.”166
Sacrificing Contestation for Security:
The exclusion of the Islamists from the National Pact was a clear indication that the
alleged liberal machine that encouraged pluralism had quickly stopped working well, not
only for discouraging an inclusive political forum, but for taking deliberate steps to wipe-
out the outspoken opposition by whatever means necessary. Although the legacy of
Islamist suppression remained static between the latter year’s of the Bourguiba
presidency throughout the political transition, and into Ben Ali’s early years, a clear
increase can be identified in the early 1990s, prompting observers to conclude that it was
at this time that the “real” political coup that defined Ben Ali’s ultimate agenda occurred,
once his grip on power had been adequately secured. The trouble began, as Henry notes,
in 1991 when the newly liberated Islamist opposition was unable to gain government
164 Interview (13.5.31). 165 Interview (11.5.30). 166 Interview (17.6.2).
61
recognition of its Ennahda Party, which was labeled as a malicious state opponent.167
Thousands of Islamists, members of the Ennahda Party, and any of its supporters were
exiled, jailed, tortured and in some cases, suffered “social deaths” through the loss of
friends, family and employment opportunities.168 The height of oppositional repression
against the Islamists occurred following the country’s legislative elections in 1989, a
forum through which Ben Ali was able to identify and subsequently eliminate members
of the regime’s greatest opposition force. If one were to measure repression by political
prisoners, qualitative or quantitative indices of torture, deaths in jail, and individual
suffering, then the latter years of the transition period should be considered the most
repressive of the Ben Ali regime, and a dramatic retrogression from its initial promises.169
In response to growing dissatisfaction and anger over the 1989 election results, members
of the Ennahda Party intensified protests at local universities and in working class
neighborhoods, resulting in an increase in repressive tactics by the government. It is
estimated that some 8,000 Islamists were arrested between 1990 and 1992.170 Late night
raids and house-to-house searches of certain neighborhoods were commonplace and
allegations of torture and interrogations of citizens in military courts multiplied
Observers claim that the justification and popular consent for its crackdown was easily
obtained under a successful public relations campaign focused on enhancing Tunisia’s
domestic and international security concerns, which correlated directly to dangerous and
contentious influences from the increasing “threats” posed by Islamists, operating both
within Tunisia and abroad.
167 Henry, Clement. “Tunisia's Sweet Little Regime,” in Robert Rotberg, ed., Worst of the Worst: Dealing with Repressive and Rogue Nations, Brookings Institution Press, 2007, p. 301. 168 Ibid., p. 306. 169 Ibid. 170 Alexander, Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghrib, p. 60.
62
Hibou and Hulsey note that the “basic machinery of [Tunisia’s] repressive system
can be found in the mechanisms modified by the regime, by international donors and
commentators, which all served to extol both Tunisian society’s capacity for adaptation
and reform as well as the social and economic aptitude of the regime.”171 The aftermath
of the 1989 elections marks the end of Ben Ali’s tolerant “honeymoon” period, ushering
in an era of oppression and political marginalization that proved that the “machine had
stopped working well.”172 Ennahda’s exclusion from national elections prompted the
group to openly exert pressure on the regime to follow through with its original
commitments to liberalization, forcing the government to “step-up” its repression through
late-night raids and house-to-house searches to capture Islamist activists, as well as
supporters of Leftist group’s like the Progressive Democratic Party (PDP) and the
Tunisian Communist Worker’s Party.173 Things deteriorated very quickly by the 1990s
when “many people started disappearing.” A university professor who participated in
this study remembered that her university had been closed for three months during the
Islamist “round-ups” and that state media would constantly show images of militant
Islamists, claiming that they were operating in Tunisia. Some of her students were
expelled from the university and imprisoned for terrorism without trials. “Many people
started disappearing very quickly.”174
According to Henry, at this time the Ben Ali regime was as repressive as any
other, “if repression is to be measured by the number of political prisoners per capita,
171 Hibou, Béatrice and Hulsey, John. “Dominance and Control in Tunisia: Economic Levers for the Exercise of Authoritarian Power,” Review of African Political Economy (June 2006), 33(108), 185-206, p.187. 172 Interview (10.5.30). 173 Interview (7.5.27). 174 Interview (16.6.1).
63
quantitative or qualitative indices of torture, deaths in jail, or other measures of individual
suffering.”175 Susan Waltz reports that the government’s extensive dragnet hauled in
more than 8,000 individuals between 1990 and 1992.176 The average Tunisia turned a
blind eye to Ben Ali’s overt oppression of the Islamists’ activities, political or otherwise,
to prevent the disastrous political side effects of Islamist intervention in politics occurring
beyond their western border in Algeria from happening in Tunisia,177 where aggressive
Islamic activism was seen as directly responsible for that country’s economic hardship,
demonstrating an overall “willingness to tolerate a strong state that claimed to act on
behalf of the national well-being.”178 The benefits of a prosperous domestic economy
outweighed the national distaste for the regime’s human rights record.
For the Tunisian people, security was very important, and probably is the factor
that explains why they may have not cared that the politics were not “too democratic” in
the beginning, but as one interviewee claimed, this should have been an indicator that the
regime was actually moving away from democracy and was not just a reaction to the
president’s concerns over Islamist influences. Furthermore, interviewees agreed that the
majority of Tunisians frankly were not on the Islamist’s side, and that they had betrayed
the Islamists by keeping their eyes shut to Ben Ali’s assault against them at the time, but
“as long as it was against the Islamists and for security nobody reacted,” except for a very
active fringe of the population – mainly human rights activists, who denounced these
inhuman treatments against the them. This passive condoning of political oppression
allowed for it to spread, and eventually eliminated anyone who spoke out against the
175 Henry, p. 301. 176 Alexander, Middle East Research and Information Project. 177 Interview (16.6.1). 178 Alexander. Middle East Research and Information Project.
64
regime, like oppositionists, advocates of democracy, and fundamentally, anyone who
disagreed – rationalized as essential for security.179
The harsh treatment of the Islamists in Ben Ali’s early years introduced an
important axiom to Tunisian politics that would continue to guide the regime’s violent
reaction to religious ideology, and particularly political Islam, both to limit the role of
powerful and allegedly violent political parties like Ennahda, and to ensure that Tunisian
society remained secular to preserve a modern image. One participant noted that religion
was like “Dracula” when Ben Ali was president.180 Liberal parties who never directly
challenged the regime but did not accept the targeting of the Islamists were also
punished. These parties were strangled by lack of resources and publication rights and
essentially “were not allowed to be a normal party for not going against the Islamists.”181
From Ben Ali’s perspective, Islam, modernity and democracy were not compatible.
Subsequently, leftists and even human rights organizations were eventually targeted for
denouncing the regime’s treatment of the Islamists. Eventually the “tyranny affected
everyone,” as the regime devised more innovative ways to quell dissent.182 In Ben Ali’s
world, if you were neutral, you lacked patriotism, and if you were critical towards the
harsh treatment reserved for the Islamists and other human rights activists, you were a
traitor to the state-party (“nation”).183
According to a representative from Ennahda, the party is not revengeful of the
Tunisian people for abandoning the Islamists throughout Ben Ali’s presidency; however,
he noted the shame that the group felt for the Muslim world, and particularly, countries in
179 Interview (8.5.27). 180 Interview (6.5.26). 181 Interview (10.5.30).; Interview (13.5.31). 182 Interview (13.5.31). 183 Jebnoun, Nourredine. Contributing comment. 4.11.12.
65
the Middle East that knew the regime had been deliberately targeting Islamists but did
nothing to help them. He remarked that Arab and Western governments had been just as
complicit in the persecution of Islamists because they endorsed Ben Ali’s “reign of
terror,” even when they really knew the truth.184 He noted that Ennahda had benefited
from having its leadership imprisoned because it strengthened the resilience of the party.
Its members always had been able to continue their work despite having to confront
tough resistance from the regime. “They never knew if they could return and knew that
they could be arrested at any time or imprisoned for a number of years,” yet the group
was able to slowly persevere.185
The Role of the Syndicate:
The Tunisian Syndicate known informally as the UGTT had always played a big role in
Tunisian politics. According to one interviewee, “when ‘Zine’ came into power, “he
bought the syndicate, like he bought everything else” by alienating and intimidating its
members and monitoring their activities and their movements.”186 He domesticated and
emasculated them through money, intimidation, infiltration, cooptation, and a divide and
rule strategy. The syndicate helped in the construction of the state under Bourguiba.
Once an powerful opposition actor in the Tunisian political system, the management of
the syndicate had also been coopted by Ben Ali after being forced to give in to the
regime’s harassment and was no longer able to sustain an oppositional posture.187
184 Ibid. 185 Ibid. 186 Interview (17.6.2). 187 Ibid.
66
The Civil Society Mafia:
Civil society groups demonstrate two trends in the Ben Ali world: the very few that
operated independently from the regime, and the fake organizations that functioned to
support a placebo activism. Like the country’s political parties, there were real civil
society actors who genuinely stood up against the regime, its oppression, and the
country’s lack of individual freedoms. More often than not, these were the people who
ended up either having to leave the country or were harassed, beaten or tortured.
Onlookers note that there were “no humanly acceptable conditions under which they
could function during Ben Ali’s presidency,” and their decision to convey advocacy amid
inescapable consequences made them very brave but assured that their organizations
would remain under-developed.188 In fact, the poignancy of independent advocacy
groups was so limited that in general, the perception is that there was no civil society
operating outside of the regime, especially when considering the threats that the regime
posed to their survival.189
Conversely, there was an abundance of “fake” civil society groups that was
described as the “civil society mafia,” and identified the group of organizations that were
allowed to receive grants from abroad or that were in some kind of coordination or
agreement with the government. No civil society association could receive grants under
the regime without its approval, to the degree that someone in the government would pick
up the phone and discourage the head of the organization from taking the money by
threatening to make his life a “living hell.“ Therefore, any sanctioned organizations had
to be working with the government, not alongside it. Any group that earned the
188 Interview (20.6.3). 189 Interview (2.5.23).
67
credentials or received training or resources from the regime meant that it was part of the
civil society façade. Like the political opposition, Ben Ali wanted some diluted version
of civil society to exist that created an image that he was a benevolent leader with an
overwhelming level of social support.190 Under Ben Ali’s presidency there were about
9000 NGO’s, “but maybe ten were actually independent; most of these NGO’s were
actually created by the regime itself to show the world that it was democratic.”191 Some
just called them “GONGO’s,” or “Government-Organized Non-Government
Organizations” because getting permission from the government to establish an
organization was seen as a privilege, not a right.192
When asked whether or not civil society organizations operated under the regime,
one interviewee immediately said “no,” and asked me if I was “crazy.”193 She elaborated
by saying that all organizations that existed had to support Ben Ali, and that ultimately
his government did not care about social issues that were important to the people.
Whether or not the statistics indicate that there were a marginal number of organizations
that had actually been truly independent of the government’s control, the point is clearly
irrelevant, since even the independent organizations were incapable of actually
accomplishing anything. The same participant shared her perceived point of view of the
government’s policy towards civil society: “to hell with the environment, to hell with
Tunisia, all that matters is the well-being of the Ben Ali family.”194
Conclusion: 190 Interview (20.6.3). 191 Interview (7.5.27). 192 Interview (14.6.1). 193 Interview (6.5.26). 194 Ibid.
68
“Domestic politics were such a failure.”195
Although an interest in pluralizing the Tunisian political system was initially articulated,
the regime was able to stave off legitimate challenges to its authority by liberating only
specific “pockets” of society that worked to distract, preoccupy, and to some extent,
appease the urge to express its frustrations and pluralistic tendencies. The regime’s
infiltration and control over fundamental outlets of the public sphere like freedoms of
expression, media, political activism, and even education were critical to ensuring that
the regime remained durable.196 And although politics was prohibited, the regime knew
that it had to construct alternative aesthetic realities197 for the people to be rewarded for
their acquiescence and to draw attention away from their unfortunate realities. These
“doses of morphine,” as one interviewee described were manifested in things like
football, music, art, entertainment, or big festivals. Overall the same interviewee said
that they were all “stupid” things that she likened to a mother giving her baby chocolate
as a temporary fix to make it stop crying, but “chocolate” was not life.198
Although the older people had grown accustomed to this dynamic, the young
people were born into it and were distraught by their social oppression. They were not
allowed to organize together or to be members of opposition parties. Interviewees noted
that the only place where the youth could come together was the football stadium, so it
became a place for jobless people to express their anger against the government’s
authority. The regime could not react too violently though, because it was better for the
195 Interview (5.5.25). 196 Interview (14.6.1). 197 Interview (16.6.1). 198 Interview (6.5.26).
69
youth to act out in a stadium than it was to act out in politics, maintaining a delicate
balance between oppression and freedom. Growing frustration and resentment of
hundreds of thousands of unemployed youth without futures juxtaposed alongside
handfuls of the privileged few driving Mercedes and Hummers was palpable and
progressively worsened in the last ten years of Ben Ali’s presidency.199
This new generation was not willing to settle for the lives that previous
generations had settled for, and arguably benefited from for the most part. As one source
highlighted, although it is certain that a substantial percentage of Tunisia’s population
had suffered from abject poverty under the Ben Ali regime, Tunisia was a country where
people made a “relatively decent living, that hosted a pronounced middle class, good
education, freedom to travel, and the ability to live relatively decent lives as long as they
did not speak about politics, challenge or question the government.”200 This may explain
why it took a new generation of youth to recognize that “they were being cheated.” Ben
Ali did not do what he promised for the youth and by December 2010, they had reached
their limit.201
A concise review of Tunisia’s political, economic and social conditions
functioning under Ben Ali’s tenure at the political apex now reflects the regime’s morbid
trajectory. Bellin considers Tunisia a primary case study to understanding the
relationship between democratization and labor, maintaining that Tunisia fell into the
categorization of a “stalled democracy,” where the possibilities for political liberalization
were indeed there, yet hinged on “important changes to state-society relations and the
gradual pluralization of power. It could be satisfactory to chock up the regime’s collapse
199 Interview (10.5.30). 200 Interview (20.6.3). 201 Interview (14.6.1).
70
to an unwavering gap between what she cites as “attenuated authoritarianism and full-
fledged democracy,” compounded by the regime’s sheer disinterest in reconfiguring
social forces and gradually distributing power.202 With the benefit of hindsight, as well
as the unprecedented candor that the Tunisian population now has when speaking about
the former dictator’s rule, the scholarship is offered new, and pertinent insight to the
preconceived perceptions of his regime’s durability to shed new light on the great
Tunisian paradox – the violent removal of an unwavering and robust dictatorship.
202 Bellin, Eva. Stalled Democracy: Capital, Labor and the Paradox of State-Sponsored Development. Cornell University Press: New York, 2002, p. 185.
71
CHAPTER 3
THE “RASHWA ” (BRIBE) STATE
Tunisia has long been viewed as a major success story in the Arab World for its unique
economic performance, vested in steady GDP growth and per capita income levels that
rise high above those in its neighboring countries. It has been repeatedly heralded by the
world’s international financial institutions (IFI’s) boasting successful indicators behind
its atypical economic trajectory, despite an entrenched authoritarian backdrop. However,
the realities of Tunisia’s political-economy were dramatically clarified amidst national
demonstrations that emerged in late 2010, calling for substantive improvements to the
country’s fledging economy, a more balanced distribution of state wealth, services and
development initiatives, and most shocking, unprecedented universal demands for civil
and political liberties. The results of these courageous challenges to Ben Ali’s brutal
authoritarian regime resulted in the removal of his symbolic crown and the end to the rule
of what many believed would be an enduring dynasty. After only 28 days of organized
protests that eventually amassed the population of Tunis along Habib Bourguiba Avenue,
the symbolic artery in the center of the country’s capital city, Ben Ali and his family fled
the country and relinquished the power that he had strategically amassed during his years
in office. The ensuing “Jasmine Revolution” has had profound impacts on the historic
evolution of the Tunisian political experience that had been indiscriminately revoked
under both Ben Ali and his predecessor Habib Bourguiba. The exciting prospects for
democratization and the relief to an economic system that had been choked by the greed
72
and malignant habits of the regime and its supporters are at the forefront of a carefully
guided experiment that the Tunisian people have begun.
A critical component to explaining sustained political authority restricted to the
hands of just two men in half a century is the nourishment of a viable and productive
economy, largely responsible for yielding the services and welfare expected by the
population in exchange for its political apathy. The correlations that can be cited
between economic crises faced by the country and insurgence of oppositional rumblings
reinforce the important role of the economy. Devoting a portion of this assessment to
Tunisia’s political-economy is essential to elaborate further on the emergence of the
monumental grievances that ultimately fueled the momentum of mass protests against the
regime, and eventually led to Ben Ali’s downfall. Tunisia’s political development
worked in tandem with economic development through a system of “dirigisme,” or
central management of economic affairs through corporatism. Rather than promoting
economic growth, this system encouraged political stability and kept the regime secure so
long as patronage continued to keep the political elite loyal.203 Sadiki notes three distinct
features of the Ben Ali economy: unity, centralized authority and incremental reform, of
which “unity” can be highlighted as its biggest success story.204
Sources recognized that Ben Ali’s dependence on economic policies tied to IFI
tutelage had been consistent during the transition from Bourguiba, and that the economic
policies that would define the Ben Ali regime had been declared a year prior to the coup
203 Henry, Clement M., “Political Economies of the Maghreb,” in David S. Sorenson, ed., Interpreting the Middle East: Essential Themes. Westview Press: A Member of the Perseus Books Group: Boulder, p. 196. 204 Sadiki, Larbi. “Engendering Citizenship in Tunisia: Prioritizing Unity over Democracy,” in Yahia Zoubir and Haizam Amirah-Fernandez, eds., North Africa: Politics, Region, and the Limits of Transformation. Routledge Taylor & Francis Group: London, 2008, pp. 126-127.
73
under agreements with the World Bank and the IMF specifically.205 The political stability
of a post-Bourguiba regime was heavily vested in the health and development of
Tunisia’s deteriorating economy. And at the onset of his administration, Ben Ali directed
much needed attention to improving Tunisia’s economy by remedying relationships with
trade unions and public organizations. Primary concerns rested in re-identifying
economic incentives, concessions and guarantees to ease the flow of resources between
the private and public sectors, to promote competition, and to safeguard the rights of the
working class. This also reflected a trendy shift in foreign policy that swept across the
Arab world in the late 1980s and early 1990s as regimes chose to adapt slightly to
economic adjustment programs sponsored by the world’s IFI’s, which often stressed
political readjustment caveats and subsequent loosening of political repression like
expanded pluralism, and as in the Tunisian example, national elections.206 In fact,
Tunisia is considered the impetus for many of these unprecedented waves of political and
economic reform. All of these relatively superficial changes did little to destabilize the
government’s central role in the economy and deviated from initial promises of self-
sustainability, since the Tunisian economy was largely reliant on the support of a Western
financial support system. Ben Ali’s greatest accomplishments stem from his ability to
balance a fragile financial system contingent upon foreign aid and stimulus programs,
and distributing wealth across competitive coopted factions of his government.
Across the Middle East, cooptation and corporatism became temporary, yet
effective strategies to building domestic alliances and maintaining power, ultimately
defining a political structure that was built on corporate arrangements and various
205 Interview (11.5.30). 206 Pratt, Nicola. Democracy & Authoritarianism in the Arab World. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2007, p. 4.
74
organizational “modalities,” rather than systems based on traditional democratic values.
Furthermore, this new era of state corporatism functioned as a model of subordination
over mass organizations while simultaneously securing greater organization over a
selective group of corporatists whose activities were bound by laws and defined by state-
led national development objectives, thereby distracting newly enfranchised factions of
the population from deteriorating political mobility and regime accountability. As a
result, tangible endeavors to raise national productivity and combat social deficiencies
like illiteracy were achieved through a discourse of national unity, as emphasized by Ben
Ali in his initial years in office that was reinforced by regime elites and facilitated by an
inclusive rhetoric.207 This structure was further supported by a simultaneous exclusion of
the old political oligarchy, which was replaced with a new coalition of supporters
mobilized through corporatist organizations and a structured system of subordination
where competition was eliminated and power revolved around the executive. The
resulting resources that accumulated in the hands of the executive enabled regime
permeability throughout the state by way of institution-building supported by an
overwhelming bureaucracy, which reified the regime’s authority and robustness.208
Authoritarianism became normalized amid calls for national unity and nationalization
projects, like social programs and development initiatives in which civil society actors
may have rejected the political system that subdued them but continued for the most part,
to remain committed to the project, making them part of the obstacle to
democratization.209 And eventually, new concerns developed across the population that
shifted from economic sustainability and domestic strife to the use of Tunisia’s
207 Ibid., p. 7. 208 Ibid., pp. 7-8. 209 Ibid., p. 13.
75
international aid and reversion to traditional practices of corruption among the nation’s
elite.210
The economic success that once supported Ben Ali’s legitimacy to the presidency
gradually evolved into a more sinister vessel of authority, where political expression was
sacrificed for economic viability across the population. Sadiki recognizes how the
construction of the regime’s political identity fell in tandem with its economic
development policies, vested in corporatism and “dirigisme.” State control of the
economy became a tool for entrenching political quietism, where marginalized segments
of the population were forced to pay political deference to Ben Ali’s rule and forfeit
individual rights for food. Essentially, goods were awarded for political acquiescence
under the nation’s new model of “economic reformism put to the service of political
particularism.” Tunisians recognized this “deal,” where politics were left to the
president, and in exchange he let them eat. This philosophy has acquired the term
“khubzism” and warrants that “you eat and you keep quiet,” marking “an unmistakable
trajectory” towards a strong state at the expense of society.211 This economic reality was
a fundamental pillar of the regime and ensured prolonged stability insofar as it was
capable of continuing to supply food to the population and maintain its end of the
bargain.
The “constitutional coup” occurred during a period of economic losses and
consistent bankruptcies. The façade of economic infallibility that had been maintained
by Tunisia’s personalistic leader, infamous for directly noting that he alone embodied the
state, had been cracked wide-open amid the ascension of a new president intent on
210 Ware, L. B. “Ben Ali’s Constitutional Coup in Tunisia,” Middle East Journal (1998), 42(4), 587-601, pp. 599-600. 211 Sadiki, pp. 126-127.
76
responding to national calls for democracy, liberalization and improvements to the
economy. The government responded to the latter by offering more low-interest long-
term loans to export-driven enterprises; however, the state’s unrelenting grip on the
financial sector may have made investors weary and preestablished private business
owners aloof to policies of economic reform.212 It is likely that any liberalization policies
endorsed by the regime were strategies of resistance to its demise by restructuring itself
through constant negotiations between the “public” and “private” realms, consciously
exerting its authority through delegation and control. Some scholars note that the
privatization of the state does not necessarily mean the loss of its capacities of control or
cannibalization by private interests, but rather a response induced by national and
international transformation.213 Nevertheless, highlighting the modus operandi of
structural adaptation cowers to the unprecedented economic liberalization that occurred
through the development of a substantial private capitalist sector in Ben Ali’s early years,
and what many believed was the “space for the development of autonomous sources of
economic power that might imaginably countervail the state one day.”214
Ben Ali inherited the Bourguiba system, brokering the same social contract as
Bourguiba. However, as described in Chapter 1, economic downturn and forced
implementation of financial reforms during Bourguiba’s later years constrained the
government’s ability to provide the social services that it vowed to distribute in exchange
for political acquiescence. This social contract policy that carried over from Bourguiba
212 Angrist, Michele Penner. “Whither the Ben Ali Regime in Tunisia?” in Bruce Maddy-Weitzman and Daniel Zisenwine, eds., The Maghrib in the New Century: Identity, Religion, and Politics. University Press of Florida: Gainesville, 2007, p. 179. 213 Hibou, Béatrice and Hulsey, John. “Dominance and Control in Tunisia: Economic Levers for the Exercise of Authoritarian Power,” Review of African Political Economy (June 2006), 33(108), 185-206, p.196. 214 Angrist, p. 178.
77
was unsustainable and as one source noted, allowed the elites operating in an empowered
and reinforced class system to dictate the country’s economic trajectory215, which
ultimately yielded a higher degree of capitalism, privatization and state retraction from
the economy. Interviewees noted that the subsequent liberalization of the Bourguiba
economy spurred the development of a competitive middle class and a more privileged
society that had become accustomed to private sector growth, which it continued to
demand after Ben Ali’s coup primarily because the middle class could afford private
services that the state had relinquished for economic austerity. However, “if you were
poor, you were forced to rely on the state,” which meant that your access to the welfare
that had initially been promised was limited once Ben Ali arrived.216
Additionally, by its very nature however, the liberalization of the private sector
was painstakingly gradual and never functioned with candid independence from
government control – prompting many to underscore the extreme ambiguity of the
“public,” and “private,” and consequently the process of privatization in general making
Tunisia a country strongly “marked by interventionism.”217 The state’s role in the
economy focused largely on intervening to establish tariffs and other mechanisms to
impose restrictions on imports, distribute subsidized credit and readjust the exchange rate
to invoke critical advantage to specific domestic manufacturers often beholden to the
state. Since a substantial portion of economic actors were reliant on the ruling party and
the state for their livelihoods, both capitalists and workers were reluctant to speak out
against the unevenly professed rules of the political game for fear that the retribution
215 Interview (3.5.24). 216 Interview (2.5.23). 217 Hibou and Hulsey, p. 197.
78
from political authorities would result in material disaster.218 Lawson expands on this
particular issue by noting that only lukewarm political allegiance was professed among
members of the private sector in their expressions of support for the regime’s RCD party
in Ben Ali’s early years.219
Economic Regionalization:
The majority of the indicators that yield Tunisia’s impressive economic growth are pulled
from the mid-1990s after the economic downturn inherited by Ben Ali in his rise to the
presidency had passed. Prior to the onset of the Arab Spring in December 2010, Tunisian
politics were fairly stable, partly from its successful and vigorous attempts to root out
viable opposition (discussed in the previous chapter), but also for its liberal economic
policies that sought to reduce budget deficits, cut inflation and open the economy to
foreign trade. A relatively high living standard stemming from an economy non-reliant
on oil and gas resources made the country an emulative economic model for other Arab
states220; however, contemporary history has unveiled the problematic features of the
economy that shattered previous conceptions of its successful development. Noting now
that the predominant factors that led to the country’s political uprisings in 2010 reflected
dire economic realities faced by marginalized populations astray from the capital and its
surrounding neighborhoods, we recognize the importance of reviewing these features
through a more thorough lens to understand how the regime was forcibly removed.
218 Angrist, p. 199. 219 Lawson, Fred H. “Intraregime Dynamics, Uncertainty, and the Persistence of Authoritarianism in the Contemporary Arab World.” in Oliver Schlumberger, ed., Debating Arab Authoritarianism: Dynamics and Durability in Nondemocratic Regimes. Stanford University Press: Stanford, 2007, p. 126. 220 Rivlin, Paul. “The Constraints on Economic Development in Morocco and Tunisia,” in Bruce Maddy-Weitzman and Daniel Zisenwine, eds., The Maghrib in the New Century: Identity, Religion, and Politics. University Press of Florida: Gainesville, 2007, p. 206.
79
Interviewees echoed Ben Ali’s paramount focus on broadcasting an image of
positive economic growth and development, both to the more privileged sectors of
Tunisian society and to the world to reinforce his legitimacy.221 The regime “spent a lot
of money” to generate and improve its image, as one participant noted, particularly in
foreign media. Ben Ali intended to juxtapose the more “rough” oppressive elements of
his regime to the benevolence that he derived from nurturing a successful economy,
constantly championing Tunisia as an emulative pupil of the IFI’s for example.222
For one interviewee domestic politics factors were “quite simple;” the regime obeyed the
World Bank and the IMF by implementing their adjustment programs to protect the
economy “but it was a fake obedience.” The regime showed the world that it was
complying with the recommendations laid out by the IFI’s, but in reality, it had been
producing false figures to deceive onlookers of the economy’s real failures, which also
fooled the Tunisian people by perpetuating a lie that the country was “not very poor.”
The welfare programs that actually existed for example were geared towards supporting
the wealthy class, while the majority of programs aimed at tackling poverty and focusing
on development were simply jargon.223 In their telling study on the country’s economy
under the Ben Ali regime, Hibou, Meddeb, and Hamzi claim that the IFI’s were
responsible for helping to “spread the image of an ‘economic miracle’ performed by the
Tunisian government.” By deconstructing the country’s allegedly stable and prosperous
economy, the authors identify “key [processes] in developing the fiction of the Ben Ali
regime as a ‘model student’” by drawing comparisons that were temporally and
geographically incoherent; modifying the construction of indicators; systematically
221 Interview (14.6.1). 222 Interview (11.5.30). 223 Interview (10.5.30).
80
forgetting past performances; appropriating social phenomena; selecting information to
conceal any which did not send the ‘right’ message; presenting “figures that were either
shown or hidden, depending on their relevance to official discourse;” and finally, shifting
the meaning of words.224
When reviewing the numbers in absolute terms, the positive perceptions that
onlookers developed with regard to overall economic performance are not surprising.
Rivlin cites several examples of the successful trends in the economy between 1995 and
2003 (apart from the aims of an identified modernizing, manufacturing sector which
remained relatively stagnant) through exceptional growth in the mechanical engineering
and electronics sectors. Similar growth in leading export sectors, specifically textiles,
clothing and leather increased by 134 percent between 1990 and 2003. Still, four primary
concerns hindered the potential of Tunisia’s economy under Ben Ali, even during a
period of successful growth: agriculture, a weak private sector, an unfavorable
international environment, and unemployment.225
Positive Economic Growth – Statistics Supercede Sociology:
The manipulation of the country’s economic data was the way the regime was able to
generate false perceptions to its more bleak economic realities. Tunisia was considered
modern and hosted economic success226, but as one interviewee highlighted, “all of
Tunisia cannot be lumped together.” The government only chose to develop the Sahel
coastline and not the Interior. As a result, indicators show that the economy was
224 Hibou, Béatrice, Meddeb, Hamza, and Hamdi, Mohamed. Tunisia after 14 January and Its Social and Political Economy, Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network: Copenhagen, June 2011, pp. 12-13. 225 Rivlin, p. 206. 226 Interview (16.6.1).
81
witnessing positive growth, but only a fraction of the population actually benefited from
this growth making it a statistical fact but not a sociological one. Positive figures
highlighting 5% annual growth did not come close to having a holistic influence on the
country, and as the source elaborated, “manipulation of the statistics and expertise was a
strategy to validate the image of the Tunisian model.”227 One interviewee claimed that
the state budget was officially zero when considering the huge income disparity between
the Sahel and the Interior.228 Furthermore, nobody knew accurate details about
unemployment until after the revolution – the regime claimed 14% but it was probably
double that. One interviewee believed that Ben Ali created “two Tunisias:” one that was
like Europe and another that was like Bangladesh; where shocking details of people
eating food from the garbage without healthcare or basic services were revealed.229
Political programs purposely ignored the Interior and left many without even the most
basic services like running water or electricity, dilapidated infrastructure and unclean
drinking water.230 Meanwhile Ben Ali gave the impression that the lower class could be
helped and that he was a “good father” for alleviating their grievances.231
Specifically, this observation reflects that regionalization had become a habitual,
and entrenched policy that Ben Ali had inherited from Bourguiba, but it was one that he
chose to accentuate.232 Participants all agreed that Bourguiba and his Neo Destour Party
only focused on developing the Sahel region and more specifically, targeted
neighborhoods in certain cities that reflected the personal ties regime elites and influential
227 Interview (14.6.1). 228 Interview (7.5.27). 229 Interview (16.6.1). 230 Interview (6.5.26). 231 Interview (3.5.24). 232 Interview (3.5.24).; Interview (6.5.26).
82
personalities had to those areas.233 Although the Interior saw limited development
around village centers, government programs never expanded far beyond these areas.234
Beyond choosing to privilege their hometowns and the people who supported their rise to
prominence, it is relatively unclear as to why the Interior was strategically neglected by
the Tunisian government, both under the periphery of Bourguiba and Ben Ali.235 Perhaps
these growing regional disparities can be explained by an overrepresentation of people
from the Sahel within the Tunisian administration, and the Interior’s allegiance to Salah
Ben Yusuf (a Pan Arab nationalist), responsible for a schism in Habib Bourguiba’s Neo-
Destour party, which negatively impacted the relationship between the government and
the countryside. Sources agreed that the western part of the country had been “forgotten,
ignored, untouched by development, and stricken by poverty.” Unemployment rates in
these areas easily reached 50% from lack of opportunity lower education levels.236 The
fact that the revolution originated in the Interior was not surprising when considering the
figures, and as one interviewee noted, would make any ruler’s demise inevitable in a
country that had become so divided.237
Caisse 26/26 and the Image of Development:
Specifically, when considering the poverty-alleviating policies geared towards
maintaining solidarity across the country, the establishment of the “Caisse 26-26
”National Solidarity Fund (NSF), which claimed to allocate large sums of money to the
needy and contributed to infrastructure projects in the country’s poorest neighborhoods,
233 Interview (6.5.26). 234 Ibid. 235 Ibid. 236 Interview (7.5.27). 237 Interview (3.5.24).
83
the incentives do not appear to be entirely economically-driven. Scholars now recognize
that targeting development projects in particularly vulnerable “incubators” for Islam
became a selective feature of the country’s political-economy scheme, where
development was seen as a secular force to limit the radicalization and politicization of
Islam. However, regardless of the strategy’s hidden agenda, it would be unfair to neglect
the obvious benefits the NSF offered. Since the program’s inception in 1992
(presumably orchestrated to damper outcries over the Islamist crackdown) supposedly 2
million Tunisians had directly benefited from its services through the construction of
schools, modern housing, roads, water and electricity. Still, these services are conceived
more as political payoffs in a “deal” brokered between the regime and its supporters,
whereby state services were offered in exchange for sustained political quietism.238
Sadiki underscores that this arrangement was essentially a quasi-tactic contract
(marginally modified from the social contract under Bourguiba) between the state and
society that represented a “quintessential example of economic reformism put to the
service of political particularism.”239
For interviewees, the purpose of the Caisse 26/26 was irrelevant because it
represented another hollow gesture in the state’s economic propaganda. One source
noted that the stark imbalance between the country’s urban, and remote poor areas was
proof that the fund was a sham, while the regime continued to disseminate propaganda
under the Caisse 26/26 guise to show that it was developing the impoverished Interior.240
In her personal experience, one interviewee explained that she had been routinely denied
permission to conduct charity work because the regime was concerned that the realities of
238 Sadiki, pp. 126-127. 239 Ibid. 240 Interview (17.6.2).
84
pervasive poverty outside of the Sahel would be revealed and potentially broadcasted to a
wider audience. To appease frustrations over these types of restrictions, the regime
established its own charitable programs and encouraged the population to donate money
to various “Caisses” (funds) that routinely represented a “brilliant idea” supposedly
linked directly to the president himself, and reflected development or social initiatives
focusing on poverty, infrastructure, and programs targeting the Interior. These funds
generally received warm public endorsement (private companies would be exonerated
from paying taxes for donating) and in his early years, polished Ben Ali’s positive and
“fatherly” image anchored in his perceived interest in helping the country and nurturing
Tunisia’s modernity. However, the sad reality is that these funds were rarely spent under
the pretenses for which they had been collected, and were simply rerouted to the
President’s personal coffers. Not only did the regime want to prevent the realities of the
country’s stark poverty and its failures from being revealed, it also intended to keep its
acquisition of public charity secret, probably to ensure that future Caisses continued to
solicit public endorsement, and more specifically, received adequate funding.241 The
Caisses represented just a marginal insight into the regime’s propensity to corruption,
which eventually evolved into an indispensable feature of the economy.
Understanding the Economy – “Liberal with a Savage Dimension:”242
“No government is founded exclusively on tactics of repression and violence, even when
ascribing the classification of a “police” state to the Tunisian case. Repressive regimes
are heavily reliant on alternative mechanisms that extend beyond the police apparatus,
241 Interview (5.5.25). 242 Interview (3.5.24).
85
often working through economic, political and social mechanisms to impose tactical
authoritarian systems.243
The economics of political oppression played a fundamental role in consolidating the
state’s control over mechanisms and procedures that influenced the domestic business
climate; and so we stray slightly from the political discourse that besets repression as the
optimal tool for political subjugation. When asked to describe the economy under Ben
Ali’s presidency, arguably the most troubling byproduct of the regime’s brutality,
participants shared very vivid and disturbing accounts and universally acknowledged its
inward orientation toward the ruling family. By the early 1990s, a strange and
inhospitable business environment emerged, in which Ben Ali’s family appeared to adopt
a competitive posture against the national economy, coopting industry after industry and
solicited bribe after bribe.244 The economy was based on an unequal network of
connections and relationships that compartmented a privileged faction of society and
prevented everyone else from prospering, eventually yielding a huge social disparity
between a handful of billionaires from Ben Ali’s clan, and everyone else.
The constraints placed on domestic businessmen and entrepreneurs is a
formidable example that explains the state’s meddling in affairs of the so-called “private”
sector and the “price that must be paid” for those who sought certain advantages by
cooperating with the state. The structure that often weighs on the liberal mobility of
private sector entrepreneurs is what protects them and provides benefits including: social
peace, geopolitical stability, market protectionism, fiscal exoneration, and administrative
243 Hibou and Hulsey, p. 187. 244 Interview (3.5.24).
86
exemptions. The protection offered by the state is thus considered adequate
compensation for a political system conducive to unrelenting obtrusiveness and control,
where the demands of the regime were translated to “more or less obligatory gifts” to its
RCD party, police associations and directly to Ben Ali’s clan. This relationship
specifically reduces the idea of “politics” of coercion by the regime to an “exchange
commodity.” This system was cyclical, where the state inevitably recruited and
encouraged the subjugation of its victims to the political system’s disciplinary power,
through their participation in the very system that fueled a logic of negotiation and
settlement. Thus, the private economy perpetuated profound mechanisms of “resistance”
that simultaneously functioned as practices of accommodation, agreements and
negotiations.245
In general, as one source noted, Ben Ali’s political economy policy was “wrong”
because “it did not allow Tunisian people to do anything in their own country.” It was
almost impossible to start an economic project or to build a business. If you did and it
was successful, the Trabelsi family would come to you and demand 50% of the company.
Whether or not you agreed, they would eventually just take everything from you and say
“bye bye.”246 Another interviewee shared the same view, explaining that the family of
the president, and especially the family of his wife were extortionists: when someone
wanted to invest money in a business, the ruling family would require “X%” of the
benefits even if they had not even invested anything themselves. Anytime there was a
flourishing business its owner would be subject to bogus taxes, forced to sell, or obliged
to take the ruling family as a partner. A progress report issued by the World Bank in
245 Hibou and Hulsey, pp. 189-190. 246 Interview (6.5.26).
87
2007 highlighted this discriminatory intervention by the government: “Although Tunisia
ranks well on a number of competitiveness and business climate indicators, special
treatment of well-connected individuals is a growing concern of the Tunisian business
community and may partially explain the low level of domestic private investment.
Beyond its effect on investment, weak public sector accountability, and the resulting
limited involvement of beneficiaries with public service providers, is likely to reduce the
effectiveness of public service provision.”247 If people refused, the ruling family would
force them out of the deal and threaten their livelihood, some even being forced into
exile.248
Rare are the ones who succeeded without the regime’s complicity.249 Most
succeeded only by surrendering and becoming a member of the Ben Ali “gang.”250 By
choosing to cooperate with the ruling family, many people accepted certain sacrifices for
guaranteed assurances that their businesses and interests would be protected for their
willingness to bargain with the state, at least in the beginning.251 By the early 1990s,
several members of the ruling family had monopolized the country’s economy, and
literally liquidated their coopted businesses to avoid paying taxes to the state. Ultimately,
people stopped investing in the economy because of the ruling family’s corruption and
unchallenged authority. Lack of transparency or visibility in the economy meant that the
ruling family could simply seize your assets without justification, which was a risk that
private sector investors eventually chose to avoid altogether.252
247 World Bank. “Country Assistance Strategy Progress Report for the Republic of Tunisia,” Report No. 38572-TN, August 13, 2007, p. 4. 248 Interview (10.5.30). 249 Interview (5.5.25). 250 Ibid. 251 Interview (10.5.30). 252 Interview (2.5.23).
88
A primary example of this mode of power relations is revealed in the Tunisian tax
system administered under the Ben Ali regime.253 An undisclosed tax system offered the
regime high degrees of latitude in pursuing illicit negotiations with Tunisian businessmen
in its early years. However, aforementioned free trade agreements signed between the
government and the EU, as well as decreased income from oil, had dramatic impacts on
government revenue and forced the intensification of tax controls to meet the surplus.
The latter years of Ben Ali’s presidency witnessed overt dissatisfaction amongst key
private sector businessmen over the arbitrary nature of tax controls and the weight of
back payments. Tax evasion was an integral feature of the Tunisian economy for
decades, and was leveraged by both Bourguiba and Ben Ali as a tool for legitimacy but
was defended publicly as a claim to encourage the “development of a national
bourgeoisie.” While the extent to which policies of tax evasion were abandoned by the
regime in times of economic hardship, it still relied on tax collection as a source of
negotiation to retain support of prominent corporate clients who supported the status quo.
This system also presented significant benefits to the client. Hibou and Hulsey note that
engaging in tax evasion assumes several guises: first, when businessmen do it
“unintentionally as an unexpected result of an imperfect command of rules and
regulations;” second, to alleviate financial cost of an enterprise; and finally, as a direct
manifestation of a power struggle with fiscal authorities. They conclude that the latter
motivation outweighs the others in the Tunisian case, since the fiscal arm is often used
for repression by the state, and is considered a “site of struggle, power relations,
compromises, and the exercise of power more generally.” They highlight further that
“fiscal practices are never simply a game of negotiations and settlements;” they are too 253 Hibou and Hulsey, pp. 189-190.
89
often inaccurately understood as substitutes for political representation or signs of
“resistance” by civil society.254 Ben Ali understood the political leverage that was
embodied in the imposition of tax laws and translated fiscal policies to instruments of
punishment during periods of heightened political opposition, where tax, and social
security collection were more diligently monitored as the first mode of regime resistance
to domestic political rumblings. When this strategy failed, the regime became more
reliant on its omnipresent security apparatus, which will be discussed in greater detail in
the next chapter.
Some interviewees noted that the standard of living was more or less ok, but it as
a cosmetic situation because the regime never engaged in long term planning255, so as it
matured, people’s lives worsened because life became more expensive, and salaries and
opportunities remained stagnant.256 Youth participants bluntly stated that there were
simply no jobs.257 Tendencies toward privatization and entrepreneurship were quickly
reversed, and private businesses were not encouraged to develop as independent and free
enterprises because the government could not steal from them or control them.258 Even
the black market had been eliminated because the regime could not make money off of
it.259 By 2009, the economic and social conditions were not good, and according to one
interviewee, there were many indicators that showed that the country was approaching
the “end of something;” people did not know “what that end was, but it was
something.”260
254 Ibid., pp. 190-191. 255 Interview (8.5.27). 256 Interview (5.5.25). 257 Interview (6.5.26). 258 Interview (20.6.3). 259 Interview (6.5.26). 260 Interview (11.5.30).
90
Ben Ali’s Mafia – The Key to His Undoing:
This “end” would be determined by the ruling family’s uninhibited spending habits and
rapacious self-indulgence in the public sector.261 The regime utilized its political
mobility and coercive tactics to realize economic opportunities through patronage and
control. Privatization encouraged the development of corruption and the monopolization
of wealth by “clans” close to Ben Ali. Since, the private sector still remained highly
dependent on the state for public intervention, private intermediaries were forced to
recognize their powers in relation to their proximity to the highest function, which was
public (i.e. the state).262 As a result, state run enterprises commanded no accountability
to those operating along the blurred line between the public and private, and enabled
unregulated flows of assets accrued to the “state” to freely travel from the Tunisian
Central Bank to the personal accounts of the ruling family and its supporters.
This mode of transfer became a cornerstone to the despicable obsession of the
Ben Ali regime to garner national assets, and explains how successful economic trends
akin to Tunisia’s contemporary development failed to produce the egalitarian distribution
of resources needed to subdue the political grievances of impoverished populations living
in the Interior. Systemic penetration by the regime into a fundamentally haphazard
private sector, coupled with a highly regulated public sector void of transparency,
contributed to the formation of a textbook Kleptocracy regime consisting of two families
(the Ben Alis and the Trabelsis) who controlled all of the country’s top economy, tried to
261 Rivlin, p. 209. 262 Hibou and Hulsey, p. 197.
91
take part of everyone’s business in the country263, and spared no industry from its greed
and thievery. The deliberate policies of self-indulgence that became fundamental to the
regime’s identity justify its affinity to stability as the primary feature of the economy.
Kleptocracies are largely characterized as a structured form of political and government
corruption where the government exists to augment the personal wealth and power of
regime elites at the expense of a wider population, often without the pretense of state
services. Considering the time it took to consolidate authority and neglect its role as a
provider of public services, it would be unfair to categorize the Ben Ali presidency in its
entirety as a kleptocracy, but it certainly qualifies in its latter years, where state funds
were directly embezzled to the personal accounts of members of the Ben Ali and Trabelsi
families. Due to a lack of adequate oversight by outside parties, and intimate knowledge
of state assets and their dispersal across the national budget, Ben Ali amassed a fortune
by stealing directly from his people. Still, political elites in professed Kleptocracies need
stability to ensure the “conversion of their transient political influence into economic
goods and services” that will be kept within the hands of the ruling family.264 This
philosophy defines the behavior of the Ben Alis and the Trabelsis when considering the
prioritization of resource allocation to the security apparatus and the regime’s high-level
of permeability within the domestic economy. The associated effects identified in the
scholarship of this form of autocratic rule largely identify with the Tunisian case and
provide the most jarring explanations for the regime’s ultimate removal from power.
Kleptocrats perpetuate an institutionalized parasitic degradation of the economy,
political affairs and civil rights, discouraging prospects for foreign investment and
263 Interview (20.6.3). 264 Henry, p. 205.
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weakening the overall domestic market. Since kleptocrats are notorious for laundering
funds that are typically accrued from tax collection or in Tunisia’s case, tariffs and
private sector profiteering policies, the system has a dire impact on the livelihoods of
nearly everyone living in the country. The embezzling of funds often earmarked for
public amenities, welfare programs, and infrastructure further degrades the universal
quality of life and squanders the resources needed to sustain and develop critical social
services. The gradual deterioration of expected government services, like proper roads,
strong education systems, adequate hospitals and affordable commodities represented
tangible sub causes of the regime’s very public thievery, and caused many to refer to the
ruling elites as a local Mafia that relied on coercion and intimidation as strategies to
compel the flow of assets – even at the lowest levels of society – to the regime’s coffers.
Rampant corruption, traditional nepotism, and clan-type bourgeoisie kleptocracy
were intrinsically linked to Ben Ali’s regime, as its cancerous tentacles gradually
penetrated all sectors of the economy over a 23-year life-span. Particularly malignant,
were Ben Ali’s parasitic in-laws and the country’s First Lady, “la Régente de
Carthage,”265 Leila Trabelsi, who were linked to numerous corruption scandals for
stealing state and private assets, including: “illegal appropriation of prime real estate, and
acquisition of formally state-owned companies at substantially depreciated prices.”266
Tunisian citizens began to view the entrenched, systemic practice of the [royal] family’s
greed and self-indulging behavior with disgust abreast poor economic performance and a
severe reduction in the quality of state services. The regime’s inappropriate spending
habits and displacement from the reality of the economic hardships that its citizens faced
265 Beau, Nicolas and Graciet, Catherne. La régente de Carthage: main basse sur la Tunisie. Paris: La Découverte, 2009. 266 Sadiki, pp. 128-129.
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began to slowly produce a buffer of illegitimacy that separated the state from society and
ultimately depoliticized the relationship.
By 1990, corruption had become palpable across the country. The behavior of the
president and his wife branded them as “thieves” and “criminals” because in addition to
whatever they simply took from the state, they managed an economy that had been
designed to steal from the people.267 Following Ben Ali’s departure in 2011, it was
revealed that the ruling family had embezzled 1/3 of the county’s state budget to their
personal bank accounts; funds that could have been used to develop or invest in the
country, but instead as one interviewee noted, the “bandit bought buildings and
condominiums.”268 Meanwhile, his family started to run the country like a Mafia,
supposedly engaging in illicit activities like dealing drugs, extorting bribes, and
compelling business partnerships under threats of violence or financial ruin.269
Most interviewees trace Ben Ali’s affinity for corruption to his merger with his
wife’s family, claiming that prior to the couple’s marriage, Ben Ali was probably
“cleaner.” Participants also noted that Ben Ali’s daughters from his first marriage never
adopted the audacious spending habits of their in-laws.270 Ben Ali’s in-laws allegedly
exacerbated the levels of uninhibited spending to an extent that the president began losing
control over them, and as one source added, “maybe he also lost control after he started to
enjoy the lifestyle as well.”271 By empowering his in-laws and putting them in positions
of high political authority, they accumulated vast wealth and became financial behemoths
that rapidly dominating and drained the country’s economy.
267 Interview (7.5.27). 268 Interview (3.5.24). 269 Ibid. 270 Interview (5.5.25). 271 Interview (8.5.27).
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Meanwhile, the periodic IFI reports failed to recognize these emerging, corrosive
features, largely given the fact that the indicators used to monitor the economy – and
consequently provided the foundations for Tunisia’s positive classification – did not
account for this immaterial economy that had largely been hijacked by the state’s
network of elites and the ruling family. The recent economic history of Tunisia is one of
an increasing deficient growth model to which few paid attention and largely explains the
important socioeconomic dimension of the 2010 uprisings. Complete silence was kept on
this phenomenon in the media as well as the academic research or the technical reports of
the IFI’s, or the EU. In contrast, Western attention has been exclusively focused on
macro-economic balances and liberalization drive along neo-liberal ideology.272 Even
independent observers that were persistently critical of the Ben Ali regime continually
championed and perpetuated the idea of the “Tunisian exception,” where successful
economic performance downplayed the “police machinery” that ran the country. Shortly
before the realities of economic disparity were brought to the forefront of the world’s
media stage in 2010, scholars certainly recognized that cracks were beginning to form in
the façade of the “economic miracle” that had made Tunisia noteworthy within the
region. Sadiki notes that the use of the economy as a tool to “tighten regime control over
people’s lives and political choice” became obvious, where economic opportunity
became linked to political loyalty to the regime. Simple administrative procedures
represented a forum of political choice that forcibly reified regime support akin to an
individual’s personal needs – whether a person wanted to procure a loan from the bank or
272 Jebnoun, Nourredine, Contributing comment. 4.11.12.
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enter a particular university, it became common practice to present a voting card with the
application.273
The Tunisian government system, reliant largely upon allegiances, networks and
clients was characterized by the increasing involvement of individuals and groups in a
system of relations that “kept a hold” on society, and prevented individuals from
speaking out, criticizing or opposing – guided largely by a pervasive system of corruption
that gradually spiraled out of control and enveloped everyone.274 Scholars note that it
became impossible to stop the “chain of reciprocity and dependency” and thus,
increasingly difficult to avoid intensifying the use of “exchange, financial exploitation,
and clientelism.” Hibou notes that this “consolidation simultaneously produces fault
lines” and opened up gaps for denunciation and criticism, and thus kept people silent
while feeling disapproval. Dissatisfaction for these mechanisms of governance does not
translate to opposition, but rather, “silence and cover-ups are the expression of an
increasing sense of unease and a gradual delegitimization of the main techniques of
government.”275 This assessment largely provides a rational explanation to prolonged
governance by the repressive regime and those living under the myth of economic
miracle, where malignant features of the system slowly erode the legitimacy of the
regime and feelings of universal dissatisfaction fester to the point of retaliation.
By 2009, Ben Ali was considered nothing more than a thief, rather than a leader.
He and his family were running a quintessential Mafia state that fostered pervasive
discontent across every economic class in the country. The ruling family had repeatedly
273 Sadiki, p. 129. 274 Hibou, Béatrice. The Force of Obedience: The Political Economy of Repression in Tunisia (trans. Andrew Brown). Polity Press, Cambridge: 2011, p. 274. 275 Ibid., pp. 278-279.
96
been raping the country over two decades and broadly marginalized its support base,
leaving only oppressive tools like force and fear as mechanisms to retain its authority and
derive legitimacy.276
The Rashwa State:
In line with traditional features of the kleptocratic state, it had become apparent that the
country’s system of corruption had implemented a national dependence on the ruling
family, evidenced by an intrinsic “rashwa” (bribe) driving an illusory “state” that
functioned unofficially to garner resources through menial and constant daily exchanges
bound by explicit legal parameters drawn by the official state. As one participant
explained, this traditional rashwa – without which nothing and no one could operate277 –
touched and controlled everyone and penetrated every part of society. Corruption
functioned within the law and was like a web that touched the whole society, implicating
everyone at a certain level.278 Interviewees indicated that corruption was in all domains;
the president’s family was always involved, whether it was in the smallest exchanges or
the largest projects – “cars, banks, telecommunications…everything.”279 It was a
phenomenon that grew exponentially and impacted every aspect of life, including sports,
education, finance, culture…everything. As a result, society grew poorer, to an extent
that even the people in the middle class could not live easily because they could not
afford to pay for daily needs.280 The rashwa system was ever-present across the country
276 Interview (3.5.24). 277 Al Jazeera English. Documentary, “The Arab Awakening: Death of Fear.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8_4OzV8DLw. Uploaded on 06.20.11. 278 Interview (16.6.1). 279 Interview (7.5.27). 280 Ibid.
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and reminded people that they could not do anything without the approval of the ruling
family, and for many, represents the principle factor that pushed people to finally speak
out against the government. One interviewee noted that you could not receive loans from
banks, fulfill federal certifications, obtain approval for official paperwork, receive
educational scholarships, or take jobs in the civil service unless you paid the family’s
rashwa and that of their proxies.281
Muhammad Bouazizi’s case reflects the national frustrations that had gradually
developed over habitual extortion and its inextricable role in the state’s operational
strategy. As a street vendor, the law dictated that he needed to obtain a license to operate
a permanent stall but his application went unanswered. Representatives of the state – the
police in this case – operating on behalf of the Ministry of Interior confiscated his scales
– unofficial state – and would only return them to him if he paid the rashwa,
demonstrating the inherent relationship between private extortion and the state’s legal
framework. As a result, people considered everything that occurred in Tunisia as illegal,
and led participants to assess that the collapse of the regime was vested in the
contradiction between a state that enforced laws that forced bribes out of people to
support the ruling family.282 Bouazizi, like too many other forgotten familles de miettes
(crumb-fed families) restricted to perpetual poverty, was not immune to this system of
rashwa extortion, where even those who had nothing but crumbs to eat, were expected to
provide a share to the government in order to survive.283 One interviewee commented
that she had no idea how the country sustained itself or how the economy did not collapse
281 Interview (10.5.30). 282 Interview (16.6.1). 283 Ibid.
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under the weight of such high levels of corruption, once the true figures had been
revealed.284
Managing Unemployment:
The country’s inhospitable job market was also marred by the regime’s familiar
detriments, like extortion, bribery and exploited loyalty to the elites running a police
state. Curbing chronic unemployment in an environment non-conducive to independent
private enterprise presented a dichotomy destined to usher in dramatic repercussions,
both to the potential for economic growth in the country, as well as the political
legitimacy of its presidential monarch. Economic analysts have labeled Tunisia’s
unemployment debacle as the greatest problem the country faces even amid positive
indicators marking its impressive demographic trends by the IFI’s. In recent years, the
rate of workers entering the labor market has been increasing, and yields a need for the
creation of approximately 110,000 jobs per year to cope with the trend.285 The economy
failed to grow fast enough or in the right way to accommodate official figures yielding
14-15 percent unemployment rates in the first decade of the new millennium. Under the
Ben Ali regime, rampant unemployment was certainly acknowledged as a pivotal
grievance to the authoritarian bargain that existed between the government and its people.
Yet, the means through which the regime sought to address the problem were intrinsically
short-term solutions that failed to pioneer necessary reforms to the economic quagmire –
most notably, a lack of job creation or opportunities for work.
284 Ibid. 285 Rivlin, p. 198.
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Instead, surging unemployment of mostly educated youth was a burden to be
bared by the national education system, which had at one time yielded the highest
performance in the Arab World. Overall, the labor force had become more educated and
the number of women entering the workforce increased following the successful
implementation of program’s to expand and improve women’s education. Thus a
phenomenon emerged in which a labor-market non-conducive to skilled labor led to
underemployment of educated youth – a worrisome trend for proponents of education as
a tool for economic development. Furthermore, like many of its Arab counterparts,
Tunisia’s emerging graduates lacked the diversification in professional specializations
needed to pioneer higher economic returns in local sectors286, which ultimately reflects
negatively on the national education system and the degrees that the regime supported.
Tunisians looked to other Islamic and Arab cultures like Indonesia, Turkey, and
Morocco; all of which appeared to have higher economic growth than Tunisia, which was
very odd according to the students who participated in this study, because their country
supposedly had great universities, which meant something was “wrong.”287 The source
added that the youth grew very depressed because of the dire unemployment situation,
which forced people to move abroad because there were no opportunities in Tunisia. By
the late 1990s, over half a million people were unemployed, job creation was decreasing
and 60,000 graduates were entering the job market annually.288 For those who could not
find jobs, Ben Ali “created a private sector” as an alternative to the high unemployment
since, as one college graduate noted, the majority of private sector jobs were reserved for
members of the RCD. She indicated that former students had to take tests to demonstrate
286 Rivlin, p. 210. 287 Interview (6.5.26). 288 Interview (10.5.30).
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employment eligibility after graduating from degree programs, and that membership in
the RCD was a powerful prerequisite to gaining employment.289
The Educational Agenda – Quantity Over Quality:
Cognizant of the threats posed by swarms of unemployed youth exiting the education
system with few career prospects, the regime sought to buy time by postponing the
inevitable influx of university graduates into the labor force by embracing a policy of
“over-education,” where opportunities to remain in the national education system were
offered in lieu of a job search. Consequently, the regime invested funds for more
universities, graduate level institutions, tuition scholarships and salaries for often
mediocre professors to house a dissatisfied population of youth that expected jobs. The
majority of the country’s youth population had never known another leader or political
system than the one they were living under, and naturally began to question the savage
restrictions on individual freedoms and liberties they endured in expectation of profitable
livelihoods and welfare support from the state. The caliber of the national education
system began to rapidly decline, given the surplus of students, lowering standards from
lack of competition in specialized programs, inadequate funding from the government,
and an overall disillusionment among students and professional faculty over the regime’s
depoliticization of the education sector.
One interviewee noted that the decline in educational value was inevitable
because the country had undergone a baby boom and that the regime had failed to
consider more long term planning to address emerging problems. She noted that in order
to respond to the increasing flow of degree-holding graduates into the professional 289 Interview (6.5.26).
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market, the government opened more and more universities to stave off its responsibility
for job creation. Post graduate education facilities flourished simply to get unemployed
youth off the streets and to keep them occupied.290 The regime opened universities on
“every street corner” and forced existing programs to raise admissions caps, in some
cases increasing masters program quotas from 20 students to 60. Another interviewee
noted that ministers would always disguise the country’s regressive indicators from Ben
Ali, particularly those dealing with Tunisia’s renowned educational legacy, choosing
instead to provide a “quick-fix” to the problem. This particular source, a university
professor, explained how she had been directly told by the dean in 2008 that her
university needed to add four or five masters programs to keep the youth in schools so
that the government could release lower unemployment figures.291
As a result, the value of degrees rapidly decreased292 because education became a
quantitative prerogative; preparing for the country’s youth surge was something that
could have been anticipated and planned for 10 or 15 years prior, and led to the country’s
vast unemployment, but the regime had no interest in addressing the needs of the country
until they posed a direct threat to its authority.293 In addition to the ever-worsening
quality of education294, participants indicated that the programs that were being created
by the government did not “lead students in the right direction;” by preparing them to
start businesses with entrepreneurial programs for example. Instead, the programs that
290 Interview (8.5.27). 291 Interview (17.6.2). 292 Interview (7.5.27). 293 Interview (8.5.27). 294 Interview (6.5.26).
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were made available to the youth were preparing them for already-inflated industries, like
white collar jobs, teachers and civil servants.295
The Trabelsi family’s entrepreneurial endeavors eventually penetrated the
education industry as well and led to their personal investments in private education. As
a result, the Ministry of Education was discouraged from maintaining its high standards
and once emulative education system to limit competition against the Trabelsi family and
to ensure profit for their investments.296 Additionally, the ruling family’s personal
investments in private schools led to the illicit distribution of state-led funding to those
particular institutions, rather than to the new public institutions in which the state had
invested. One participant noted that the Ministry of Education gave state offered “loans”
to build and support the private universities that were established by the Trabelsi family.
These state funds – extracted directly from the Tunisian people – were desperately
needed by public universities that lacked essential resources and suffered from
government neglect.297
The value of degrees lost considerable integrity in the latter years of Ben Ali’s
presidency partially as a result of an overt favoritism towards students and faculty that
were loyal to the RCD party. A frequent trend in the university system and commonplace
across all industries in the country was the blatant practice of political nepotism, where
skilled professionals were eventually replaced with people loyal to the regime despite
their qualifications, credentials or behavior.298 Many of the deans, directors, and
295 Interview (8.5.27). 296 Interview (17.6.2). 297 Ibid. 298 Interview (16.6.1).
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presidents of the universities were nominated by the palace for reasons that were not
always based on competence or efficacy, according to several sources.299
Finally, education suffered under the regime’s oppressive and unrelenting
restrictions over material that could be discussed in the classroom. Universities were a
major source of political paranoia for the regime, because they housed a high number of
disenfranchised youth who were more prone to challenge the regime’s authority. As a
result, the university had become a depoliticizing instrument that regurgitated a pre-
approved curriculum managed by the regime and imposed certain restrictions on students
in order to prepare them for the passive lives they were expected to live after graduating.
One interviewee elaborated saying that no one could wear hijaabs300, students could not
organize unions, students who were not affiliated with the RCD were not allowed to win
student elections or receive scholarships. Both student and faculty skills,
“accomplishments, achievements and publications were not important, what mattered
was the kind of service you could provide to the regime – and that meant being a member
of the RCD or writing articles that championed the regime, which would get you
whatever you wanted in that case.” Professors lacked all motivation in this environment
because they could not even tell the students what they really thought. It was as though
they were playing a role to earn a salary. Every program was channeled and had to be
validated by the Ministry of Education, essentially muzzling the professors in order to
maintain a “consistent harmonization” that prevented any room for independence or
means to prepare students for employment and active life.301 One of the professors who
299 Interview (17.6.2). 300 Muslim headscarf worn by women. 301 Interview (8.5.27).
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participated in this research study noted that she would not have been able to be
interviewed if we were in Ben Ali’s Tunisia.302
Tunisian Political-Economy:
To many, the Tunisian economy represented one of few triumphs of the Ben Ali reform
process, and it continues to gain recognition as one of the most prosperous examples of
economic growth in the Middle East. Alexander notes that “most Tunisians tolerated the
government’s repression” if it meant lower unemployment and attracted foreign
investment.303 However, the consolidation of wealth across a select group of elites began
to shift public opinion and left many both financially disenfranchised and without
political participation. Essentially, the “deal” had been broken. Government officials
retained a substantially higher degree of control and discretion over the private sector,
relying heavily on arbitrating powers to regulate the government-private sector
relationship. Although the government is believed to have recognized its limitations as
both entrepreneur and financier, it was unwilling to share power with the private sector,
utilizing deceptive measures like limiting transparency or clarity with regard to
government sponsored contracts, and continuing to act arbitrarily and unpredictably. The
country’s large public sector increased opportunities for government-sponsored patronage
and control.304 The Ben Ali regime relied on cooptation and patronage to appease the
potential opposition forces close to the epicenter of government power, often paying
them off for their loyalty at the expense of a free-market economy encouraging of
302 Interview (16.6.1). 303 Alexander, Christopher, “Authoritarianism and Civil Society in Tunisia,” Middle East Research and Information Project. http://www.merip.org/mer/mer205/alex.htm/. Accessed on 12.16.2011. 304 Rivlin, p. 209.
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competition and eliminating corruption. Sadiki ascribes Ayubi’s “overstated state”
example to this case where the strengths of opposition forces shifted from the economic
sector and began to find support in social movements that, as previously mentioned,
failed to be fully institutionalized during Ben Ali’s early years in office.
As a result, civil society became a platform for unity and collaboration, yet civil
society actors too fell victim to renewed political oppression that implicated civil liberties
across society.305 We recognize now that the causal relationship between economics and
politics envelops a new cultural fold and that authoritarianism cannot be reduced simply
to economic and institutional dimensions. As Pratt notes, there is no mutually exclusive
relationship between socioeconomic viability and demands for political and civil
freedoms. Rather, we understand authoritarian hegemony exerted by a regime to lack a
zero-sum credential since the extent to which a dominant group can exert its power
reflects the extent to which the dominated group chooses to participate in the system and
their belief in the validity of the system. Therefore, a highly functional apparatus in
which civil society is constructed at the hands of the state leads onlookers to equate civil
society with regime longevity rather than a vessel for democracy and liberalization.306
State pioneered civil society ultimately traces resources and power back to the regime,
therefore, actions of ordinary people who continue to participate “in the system” that
oppresses them fortifies a rigid regime infrastructure that leaves it immune to popular and
united contestation.
Through this explanation, and as demonstrated in the Tunisian example, civil
society actually abandons a more traditionalist, liberal role as presented by de
305 Pratt, p. 4. 306 Ibid., p. 10.
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Tocqueville where it functions as a buffer whose institutions exist beyond the state and
act to counterbalance state power and prevent despotic rule. Tunisians have relied on a
unique system of “self-regulation” during periods of economic or social crisis, where the
country has accepted the intervention of a strong state to restore order and prosperity.
However, inviting the state into the depths of private enterprise and civil society has
enabled unrestricted direct access and greater state control through countervailing
measures.307 The autonomy with which civil society organizations and NGO’s could
function is debatable. Tunisia had thousands of NGO’s at the height of the regime’s most
repressive age, but only about a dozen or so were considered truly independent from the
government – and not used as a counterweight to oppositional actors in civil society.308
Still, it is argued that the domination of civil society under authoritarianism does not
destroy it; civil society continues to exist but does not behave or resemble civil society in
liberal democratic systems. It has consistently played a role in Middle Eastern case
studies of the time period, cited as a catalyst for state building and avenue for citizens to
become part of the state.309
Political scientists have adequately highlighted the power of civil society and its
influence in exclusionary authoritarian systems. When we delve deeper into the Tunisian
case, it is abundantly clear that the role of civil society should not be underestimated, and
that in fact, its functionality and evolution throughout the rule of Ben Ali provided a
realm of support and expression for Tunisians despite the consistent and unrelenting
inhibitions exerted by the regime. Nonetheless, the regional aphorism endures. As Pratt
307 Alexander, Christopher. Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghreb. Routledge: New York, 2010, p. 34. 308 Henry, Clement, “Tunisia's Sweet Little Regime,” in Robert Rotberg, ed., Worst of the Worst: Dealing with Repressive and Rogue Nations, Brookings Institution Press, 2007, p. 300. 309 Pratt, pp. 11-12.
107
notes in the introduction to her extensive analysis covering the functionality of civil
society across the Arab World, the arrival of the “third wave” of democratization (ref.
Huntington) compounded by pressures from economic sponsored reform organizations
like the IMF or the World Bank that should force traditional authoritarian regimes to
open up to more progressive civil society institutions is remiss. Although elements of
traditional civil society embodied in NGO’s, women’s groups and human rights
organizations have evolved organically under the repressive authoritarian apparatuses
characteristic of the region, expected political openings have not emerged in a sustainable
way.310 Pratt classifies the Tunisian case as a single party example notorious for coopting
functionally differentiated organizations, like trade unions, peasant organizations, and
professional associations under the regime’s umbrella, thus leaving little room for
political or civil society activity independent of the regime and concentrating the possible
power and opportunities of these sectors within its hands.311
And yet, with all of these slight reforms to Tunisia’s economic, social and
political sectors, it too falls into the pervasive discourse over the democratization
aphorism, where pivotal structural elements that have come to define the region’s states
now serve as clear impediments to democracy and liberalization, despite the fact that in
many examples like Tunisia, these elements do exist and have even been reformed as
outlined in this analysis. This leaves many to seek explanations from the literature that
reflect the nature of Middle Eastern authoritarianism and its relationship to liberalization
strategies as a means for prolonging regime strength. Within Posusney and Angrist’s
collection of texts on the subject, one author in particular, Eva Bellin addresses this very
310 Ibid., p. 1. 311 Ibid., p. 3.
108
issue and supports a powerful explanation to the Tunisian transitional period, where calls
for reform radiated cosmetic notions of political liberalization and prospects for change,
while actually discreetly erected a state apparatus that engulfed major factions of society
and molded them in a way that suited the strategies of the regime, rather than
encouraging the latitude necessary to establish institutions that function beyond the
control of the state.
By acknowledging a litany of axioms regarding fledging civil societies incapable
of further democracy (sometimes described as empty shells), state-ownership of principle
economic stimuli despite evolving structural adjustments, low literacy and education
rates, and the region’s overall isolation from democratic “epicenters,” it is clear that the
prerequisites needed for democratic growth are absent and explain the failure to catch the
third wave.312 However, beyond these prerequisites, it can be argued further that they are
still inadequate to explaining the region’s sustained affinity to authoritarianism,
especially since the democratic impulse has manifested itself previously in several ways.
Civil society, although often perceived as hollow and ineffective, is active and present,
and economies in the region have (often forcibly) liberalized through the encouragement
of international financial organizations. Tunisia vividly represents this historic path of
development, while also retaining one of the critical characteristics that is used to respond
to the authoritarian argument – state capacity and the ability to sustain a monopoly over
coercion through an effective and coherent “coercive apparatus.” It is this distinction
312 Bellin, Eva. “Coercive Institutions and Coercive Leaders,” in Marsha Pripstein Posusney and Michele Penner Angrist, eds., Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Regimes and Resistance. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.: Boulder, 2005, pp. 22-23.
109
Bellin argued, that separates successful cases of revolution from cases of “revolutionary
failure or nonoccurrence.”313
Conclusion:
The surprising scholarly interpretations and associated testimonies offered
throughout this analysis prompt many to question why the Tunisian people allowed
unrelenting political oppression to continue to endure amid a stagnant, fledging economy
and deteriorating public services. The social contract that assured society’s political
obedience in exchange for services and high standards of living evaporated long before
Muhammad Bouazizi’s act of self- immolation and a subsequent national uprising against
the regime. Both Bellin and Hibou attempt to explain this anomaly through in-depth
investigations that reflect upon the relationship between mechanisms for policing and
oppression, and the economic miracle by echoing scholars like Michel Foucault for his
contributions on socio-economic bases to the exercise of power and the process of
knowledge that constituted Ben Ali’s political power, looking specifically to
“rationalities of the mechanisms of subjection, submission and consent”314 Subsequent to
the preceding analysis on Ben Ali’s presidency and the functionality of the economy and
its accessory to the authoritarian model, dissatisfaction still remains as scholars continue
to grapple with the prolonged durability of a closed political system while emphasizing in
particular, the temporal variable and its relationship to a relatively prosperous economy.
Hibou identifies a polarization in the scholarship and how critics categorize the Ben Ali
regime given the conditions in place. The first group attributes an unconditional support
313 Ibid., p. 25. 314 Hibou, p. 9.
110
to the “economic miracle” concocted from a mixture of clear economic success, the
development of social programs and the march towards democracy, where support from
the masses was founded in the “construction of the myth of the economic miracle,” both
by external observers and within a narrative perpetuated exclusively by Tunisian
officials.315 The other group highlights a “contradiction between economic success and
ferocious political repression,” yielding the propensity for oscillation between these two
extreme positions. As a result, scholars were inconclusive in their recommendations for
Ben Ali’s Tunisia; debating over whether to target support for economic programs and
ignore the political situation or praise an economic success story that was simply
“spoiled” by an increase in political restrictions.316
Meanwhile, this same logic provides an interesting justification for the domestic
debates that were occurring amongst ordinary Tunisians who toyed with this paradox.
Bellin notes that both private sector capital and organized labor were surprisingly
ambivalent toward the “general project of democratization,” when compared to their
enthusiasm for state responsiveness on particular policy issues in periods of economic
liberalization. Both parties remained with the regime despite a barrage of false promises
for democratic reform, leaving Tunisia “stalled between democracy and authoritarianism”
and the state “neither fully accountable to society nor fully autonomous.” The best
explanation offered for this ambivalence to political reform is vested in the origins and
growth of private capital and labor, attributed largely to state sponsorship and the state’s
central role in maintaining discretionary and ambiguous support for the private sector; the
315 Ibid. 316 Hibou and Hulsey, p. 187.
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incomplete autonomy between the private sector and the state “spelled diffidence about
the democratic project.”317
As previously referenced, Angrist discusses the potential for democratization
given the liberalizing trends seen in Tunisia’s economic history. The country, up until
December 2010 was a relatively prosperous nation, boasting a high GDP, large middle
class, and high education and literacy rates for the developing world. Regardless of these
positive indicators that would normally bode well for the establishment of political
pluralism, the “prospect seemed out of reach at [that] juncture.”318 At the time of that
piece’s publication, the ability to predict the revolutionary events that would take place a
mere two years later seem to contradict any previous assessments that considered
political change as even a remote possibility in a country like Tunisia. However, to the
credit of Angrist and the overwhelming number of scholars who shared her views, change
did not happen gradually, nor by result of systemic evolution. The dramatic disruption to
the status quo warrants a new context for discussion pertinent to Tunisia’s political-
economic relationship, and the effects that one has had on the other, rather than
attempting to integrate preexisting hypotheses to explain the contemporary realities that
have now emerged. The archaic rhetoric centered on the possibility of state-led
democratization is a phenomenon that is contradicted by the Tunisian case, which
drastically undercuts the viability of arguments acknowledging the role of the economy
as a barometer to political freedoms, given the Ben Ali regime’s steady resilience to
reform despite notable economic achievement.
317 Bellin, Eva. Stalled Democracy: Capital, Labor and the Paradox of State-Sponsored Development. Cornell University Press: New York, 2002, 6. 318 Angrist, 198.
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Furthermore, it is readily apparent from the previous analysis that questions
concerning the integrity of the reports released by the IFI’s that constantly championed
Tunisia’s economic performance should be raised. The parameters on which these
reports are based are clearly problematic, and warrant new consideration beyond the
scope of analysis that relies on economic indicators as the sole sources for analysis. We
understand now that the Tunisia boasted reputable scores to its demographic and
principle economic indicators, yet the extent to which the regime had penetrated local
industry and monopolized private enterprise misled analysts to conclude that the
country’s trajectory was positive and advantageous to political and social development
throughout the country – predictions that strayed far from reality. Rampant corruption
among members of the Mafia monarch’s Kleptocracy, chronic unemployment and vast
income disparity between the country’s interior and coastal region’s define the country’s
economic profile during Ben Ali’s presidency and are the direct causes for the dramatic
political events that emerged in 2010.
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CHAPTER 4
THE SECURITY STATE
When I first asked someone to explain how he would describe the Ben Ali regime, his
immediate response was, “Have you read 1984? Do you remember the image of a giant
poster looking down at you?”319
Overshadowing the bustling Habib Bourguiba Avenue in downtown Tunis is the
behemoth Ministry of Interior320 (MOI), a term in itself that instilled disturbing
sentiments of fear, terror and even reverence for most Tunisians. An extension of the
omnipresent state RCD party, the MOI represented the epicenter of the Ben Ali regime’s
authority and its principle mechanism of oppression. Operating under a guise of security
against allegedly persistent threats posed by Islamists and political oppositionists, the
MOI operated under unchecked authority to quell resistance and compel political
acquiescence from society, sparing no measure of compassion or humanity to sustain the
status quo. Understating the authority of the MOI would be a severe miscalculation,
given Ben Ali’s affinity to the use of security to support his legitimacy to rule the
country. The universal recognition of the MOI’s symbolic power was affirmed by the
masses that accumulated in front of its headquarters building in the capital during the
country’s political uprisings in 2011, which to most outsiders would be a non-traditional
gathering point for protesters calling for the downfall of a country’s government and is
certainly indicative of where the regime’s true authority lied. The dismantling of Ben
319 Interview (2.5.23). 320 Appendix C-2.
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Ali’s regime voiced under a universal slogan that originated in Tunisia and resonated
across the Arab World – “As-shaab yooreed isQaat an-nithaam321” (the people want to
topple the regime) – espoused the inextricable linkage between Tunisia’s runaway
president and the “regime” (an-nithaam) he maintained to ensure his political
longevity.322
The initial years of Ben Ali’s presidency saw a dramatic shift in resources to
accommodate and buttress paramilitary and police units that came to define the security –
centric nature of the state – an evolving feature of the regime. Henry notes that Tunisia
suffered from idiosyncratic rule after Ben Ali’s coup in 1987, given the new leader’s
unfamiliarity with an institutionalized network that been inextricably reflective of
Bourguiba and his philosophy, and compounded by his lack of comparable historic
legitimacy.323 Funds that had been traditionally allocated to the regular armed forces
were diverted to prevent the military from amassing too much power during the highly
precarious anti-Islamist campaigns that followed Ben Ali’s attempts at political
reconciliation and democratization, as outlined in the 1988 National Pact. This
disingenuous gesture inadvertently forced the Islamists out of the political arena and
created a precedent for their prolonged persecution throughout the regime’s tenure.
Further reforms stripped the military of the potentially disruptive, largely youth-based
conscripted soldiers who presented risks to political stability, further deconstructing the
integrity of the army and left it highly under-funded and resentful. Simultaneously, these
321 “Nithaam” carries several translations in Arabic, including: system, regime, institution. For the purpose of this investigation the most logical translation would be “regime” or “apparatus,” since the demonstrations carried out by the Tunisian people called for more than the removal of the president from power, but the pervasive security apparatus that operated on his behalf. 322 Interview (16.6.1). 323 Henry, Clement M. “Political Economies of the Maghreb,” in David S. Sorenson, ed., Interpreting the Middle East: Essential Themes. Westview Press: A Member of the Perseus Books Group: Boulder, 2010, p. 197.
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reforms empowered the senior-military officials since the army had been relatively
corporatized through inadvertent specialization and new autonomy that was given to
commanders and the armed forces.324 This fundamental polarization entrenched a
hazardous dynamic to the unchallenged political authority garnered by Ben Ali and his
supporters atop the political apex. The disenfranchised and abandoned army slowly
made it just another institution subordinate to the regime after being deliberately
excluded in the president’s early years, which clearly explains its relatively swift
defection amid mass political demonstrations that forced the regime from power two
decades later.
Sadiki notes that “the rise of alternative identities, [whether] spatial or political, in
the community manufactured by the regime is not only imaginable, but also carries risk.”
The most jarring feature of the regime was the imposition of its inflated internal security
apparatus.325 By the 1990s Tunisia represented a “police state,” following “big and
visible increases in the police force,” producing numbers that ranged between 80,000 and
150,000; almost four times the force from the mid-1980s.326 – a “vast” police force that
“dwarfed” in absolute numbers, those in Morocco and Algeria, for a population that was
one-third the size of the others. According to Henry, it is impossible to estimate the real
costs of Tunisia’s infrastructure as a police state, or the extent to which the funds required
to realize this miscalculated vision could have been otherwise invested in more
324 Lawson, Fred H. “Intraregime Dynamics, Uncertainty, and the Persistence of Authoritarianism in the Contemporary Arab World.” in Oliver Schlumberger, ed., Debating Arab Authoritarianism: Dynamics and Durability in Nondemocratic Regimes. Stanford University Press: Stanford, 2007, p. 126. 325 Sadiki, Larbi. “Engendering Citizenship in Tunisia: Prioritizing Unity over Democracy,” in Yahia Zoubir and Haizam Amirah-Fernandez, eds., North Africa: Politics, Region, and the Limits of Transformation. Routledge Taylor & Francis Group: London, 2008, p. 123. 326 Henry, Clement. “Tunisia's Sweet Little Regime,” in Robert Rotberg, ed., Worst of the Worst: Dealing with Repressive and Rogue Nations, Brookings Institution Press, 2007, pp. 301-302.
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productive expenditures.327 The quintessential “mukhabarat state” amplified the Islamist
threat to condone its excessive policing, and contributed to the regime’s deep fear of a
region-wide Islamist threat, underscored by the violent bloodbath in Algeria that occurred
during Ben Ali’s first decade in office.328
Hibou notes that we have “seen repressive techniques, in their extreme and visible
forms, touch only a very restricted number of people, on the other hand, daily life in
Tunisia was characterized by the conjunction of an apparent normality and a constant and
intrusive police presence,” and although no government is able to survive based
exclusively on the means of violence without some alternative to power and legitimacy,
in the totalitarian Tunisian case, the basis of power and a network of secret police and
informants were not mutually exclusive.329 The Ben Ali regime relied essentially on a
dehumanized form of repression, where police were replaced with placebo robot soldiers,
where conceivably, one man could push a button and destroy whomever he pleased, thus
meshing the relationship between power and violence into a single entity and blurring the
distinction between the “softer” forms of police control, surveillance and censorship by
the services of order, and the single RCD party.
The security apparatus was responsible for uninhibited violations of civil liberties,
given its propensity to surveillance, phone tapping, direct threats, passport confiscations,
beatings, and assassinations. The targets for these methods of oppression were
indiscriminately selected, ranging from rank and file workers, to university professors,
327 Henry, Interpreting the Middle East: Essential Themes, p. 198. 328 Sadiki, p. 123. 329 Hibou, Béatrice. The Force of Obedience: The Political Economy of Repression in Tunisia (trans. Andrew Brown). Polity Press, Cambridge: 2011, p. 81.
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human rights activists, and political opposition figures.330 Scholars have long reviewed
Ben Ali’s motivations for constructing an overbearing police state, following notable
attempts to expand on civil liberties and construct a new forum for political contestation
during his first years in office. When considering the historic context of his own role in
Bourguiba’s removal from power, it is argued that Ben Ali recognized that simple
cooptation of critical elites was inadequate to preserve regime durability. Ben Ali’s own
rise justified his paranoia over loosening the reins of power.331 Instead, outright
repression became an integral feature of the state’s operational strategy during the
regime’s early years.332 It is certain that the police played an undeniable role in Tunisian
political life through its obvious techniques of oppression, where the importance of
violence, fear and a general ambiance of mistrust cannot be underestimated by regional
scholars. However, as Hibou notes, mechanisms for domination and control over the
Tunisian population were anchored in the most everyday relations of power. Her
contributions to the psychological ramifications of the coercive police state outline
methods of dominance over all aspects of the lives of ordinary citizens, which
characterized the core nature of the regime. Specifically, when considering the obvious
influences that ever-present policing has on a person’s frame of mind, control takes place
above all, “through constant coercive practices involving economic and social
activities.”333
330 Alexander, Christopher. “Authoritarianism and Civil Society in Tunisia,” Middle East Research and Information Project. http://www.merip.org/mer/mer205/alex.htm/. Accessed on 12.16.2011. 331 Sadiki, p.123. 332 Alexander, Middle East Research and Information Project. 333 Hibou, Béatrice and Hulsey, John. “Dominance and Control in Tunisia: Economic Levers for the Exercise of Authoritarian Power,” Review of African Political Economy (June 2006), 33(108), 185-206, pp.187-188.
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MOI or RCD?:
As the regime matured and consolidated its authority, It became clear that there had been
a serious shift in power from the RCD – which to many appeared to have lost all
semblance of a political party and retained few functional characteristics beyond
superficial support for the regime and a political status quo – to a more abrasive tool of
the government in coordinated measure with the MOI to compel allegiance through terror
and to quash dissent. People began to see that there were no more politics in the party,
just emotionless, immoral and “low” individuals whose only credential for their position
of power had been the support that bolstered their mobility from corrupt practices and a
reliance on the police. Anger against the ruling Ben Ali and Trabelsi families, against the
party, and against the regime (the police especially) festered across Tunisian society,
especially in the regime’s latter years.334
For the most part, Ben Ali had followed through with his promises to bolster the
country’s security but many questioned what they had given up in return, especially after
it had become clear that his solution to enhancing the country’s security was to impose a
police state that the MOI regulated.335 Towards the end of Ben Ali’s tenure, it was
apparent that the true seat of authority had transferred from the executive and judicial
branches to the MOI, whose employees forcibly extracted legitimacy from the Tunisian
people without impunity by fear, torture, unlawful arrest, imprisonment without charge.
Tunisians acknowledged the police’s unconstrained authority, evidenced by creative
street terminology – Tunisians specifically referred to the police as “al Haakim336” –
334 Interview (10.5.30). 335 Interview (6.5.26). 336 Roughly translated from Arabic, the term means “one who judges,” as in the justice system, indicating that police authority was perceived to supercede that of the state’s justice system.
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which denotes a fusion between the ideas of justice and crime, over which the police had
paramount, uncontestable authority.337 For some, a bloated security force and shifting
jurisdiction from the RCD to the MOI had made Ben Ali irrelevant because the system of
control and coercion that supported his political longevity was secure.338
Every interviewee noted that it was routine for neighbors, students, colleagues
and family members to randomly disappear for no apparent reason, where rarely any
justification for the actions of the police would be required or expected under the
regime’s conception of swift justice.339 Tunisia became a country where fear dominated
society – embodied in a trend of authoritative abuse of power and oppression against
dissent, or perceived lack of allegiance to the regime; often the latter could be justified by
corrupt and despicable abuses of power – where citizens could be targeted for less
innocuous crimes like open defiance against the regime to the more ambiguous, like
being beaten to death after being accused of being a Salafi, when the victim did not even
know what a Salafi was.340 Random persecution for no particular reason was common,
and failing to stay within often unclear bounds of the “law,” either by attending a
business meeting, reading the wrong book, choosing to grow facial hair, or raising the
price of bread in your coffee shop as one source highlighted, could make you
disappear.341 The regime was not only content to run these more ambiguous campaigns
to eliminate members of society it deemed necessary but targeted efforts to “simply
destroy them,” either by threatening their families, vandalizing their property, preventing
academics and opposition figures from publishing or holding meetings, firing them from
337 Interview (6.5.26). 338 Interview (2.5.23). 339 Interview (10.5.30). 340 Jebnoun, Nourredine, Contributing comment. 4.11.12. 341 Interview (2.5.23).
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their jobs, and manipulating the tax system to impose such heavy fines that they would be
forced into bankruptcy.342 Many have labeled Ben Ali’s Tunisia as a casebook example
of the totalitarian state, where a pervasive reign of terror perpetuated by the regime
indiscriminately shadowed the country, successfully removing society’s more contentious
actors, but also imposing a broad understanding that everyone was constantly being
watched and that all individual freedoms that, throughout Tunisia’s prolonged history of
dictatorship, had been put “off-limits” were gradually revoked to the point where self-
scrutiny dominated daily life and trust was outweighed by fear for one’s personal
safety.343
The impressive percentage derived from the police/citizen ratio, no matter who
supplies the actual estimates fell between 1/67 and 1/112 for a population of 10
million.344 Police omnipresence was the most visible form of repression, and
indisputably the most denounced by international human rights organizations, comprising
a complex network of policing that radiated far above and beyond those who held the
official title of police officer. Policing, surveillance, monitoring and clandestine
reporting encompasses a much larger following, including certain soldiers on police duty,
different categories of “informers,”345 and also members of the state party. To some
degree, “everywhere in the country, throughout all regions, in administrative offices,
public companies, big private enterprises, on the roads and on public transportation, at
place of work and in bars and places of relaxation and entertainment, all of these agents
kept people under surveillance and carried out continuous checks on citizens, travelers,
342 Interview (5.5.25). 343 Interview (2.5.23). 344 Hibou, p. 81. 345 Ibid.
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employees, school pupils, students, believers, car drivers, readers, parents, consumers,
passers-by, lovers and tax payers” to assure monitor and document any suspicions,
inklings or even accusations of dissent.346 The regime even embedded informants in its
embassies around the globe to report on citizens abroad.347
The Use of RCD Informants:
The arbitrary division between the MOI and RCD ensured a pervasive state presence
across the country that tapped into every industry, political forum, and neighborhood,
facilitated by a system of informants that covertly worked on behalf of the regime to
report dissent. Nearly every participant made reference to the RCD’s intricate network of
spies that would operate within society as the regime’s embedded eyes and ears, to wipe-
out public dissent or uncover potential plots against the government. In every city,
neighborhood and university, there were a determined number of people that were
specifically implanted by the RCD to spy on people. Interviewees said that Tunisia
became a country where everyone remained silent almost about everything, because even
though it was understood that there were certain topics that could never be discussed
openly, the ambiguity made most people feel vulnerable because there would almost
always be someone around who was spying for the regime .348
RCD informants were either employed by the MOI, or would be paid indirectly
for their services. They were highly localized, as it was more beneficial to the MOI to
have the highest level of reliable information about individuals that were being reported
on, including their names, where they lived, worked, or went to school. The informants
346 Hibou, pp. 81-82. 347 Jebnoun, Nourredine, Contributing comment. 4.11.12. 348 Interview (5.5.25).
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would monitor an individual's activities and their behavior, documenting things like drug
use, whether they went to a mosque, whether women wore hijaabs, and what clubs or
organizations they joined. One interviewee noted that whenever more sensitive topics
were brought up by an individual, talking directly about Ben Ali for example, everyone
who was within ear shot would be scared that he or she was a spy and that they could be
implicated in discussions of dissent just by association.349 The list of names produced by
the informants would be provided to the local police, who would then respond as
necessary.
Interest in operating on behalf of the RCD for most was ultimately based on a
universal understanding that people were incapable of living better lives without the
regime’s blessing. RCD members were showed opaque favoritism and given preferential
treatment in critical circumstances across daily life, which represented a powerful
incentive for a population lacking adequate opportunities and facing economic hardships
to sacrifice moral integrity for sheer survival. In addition to receiving initial
consideration for the limited number of jobs that were even available in the country, a
portion of the RCD’s informants, members and affiliates supported the state’s party for
the wide spectrum of guarantees they would receive. Spies were not paid directly but got
a number of benefits, like the freedom to travel abroad, administrative facilitation for any
applications or processing (visas, job applications, university scholarships), guaranteed
placement in highly contested university slots, higher grades, better salaries, promotions,
land leases, lower taxes, bank loans with lower interest rates, and business permits among
other things.350 One interviewee offered two personal examples to explain how
349 Interview (6.5.26). 350 Ibid.
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membership in the RCD was crucial to self-advancement. She had a friend – an aspiring
playwright – who submitted a script that allegedly made symbolic reference to the state
that was interpreted as critical, which forced him out of the competition and preventing
him from publishing in the future. She had also been a casualty of non-affiliation with
the state party, unable to get a job because she could not produce an RCD membership
card or provide a reference to a familiar RCD contact working in the law firm where she
had applied, confirming that the rashwa system of bribery and corruption was permeable
across society, and traced directly to the RCD.351
Whether members of the RCD demonstrated genuine allegiance to the regime was
probably inconsequential. The Tunisian government had successfully amassed a
semblance of support in nearly two million members of the state party, which
underscored a powerful corollary to the regime’s overall resonance and likeability, even
though the motivations for membership were undeniably misleading, at least for a
substantial percentage of the RCD’s members. It is important to underscore that the
RCD’s appeal did not translate to an acceptance of the status quo, but often represented a
symbolic gesture of political allegiance to Ben Ali and his clan, which reflected the self-
interests of the individual and demanded the regime’s reciprocation to that allegiance by
a continuing provision of goods, services and security.
RCD affiliation underscored the regime’s permeability and quintessential
functional necessity for the average Tunisian, and underscored a certain relationship of
compulsion between society and the state that made it impossible for citizens to survive
outside of the constructed system in which they lived and operated. Every aspect of life
351 Ibid.
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was tied to Ben Ali and a regime that relied on compulsion for national acquiescence352,
punishing anything outside of support for the regime, and subservience to the RCD,
which outside of the MOI, resembled a satellite epicenter of the state’s authority.
Interviewees expanded on this judgment, noting specifically that membership in the RCD
was not a voluntary choice, but was “necessary to survive.”353 The RCD’s monopoly
over every aspect of public, and arguably private life tied every Tunisian to a compulsive,
stagnant and entrenched regime, whose oppressive exoskeleton appeared
uncontestable.354
In what Hibou describes as the “snares of mediation,” the bodies of the state
party, whose network of informants represented only a minute network of surveillance
across the country, was “indisputably the most significant and most systematic means of
surveillance,” illustrated by a physical omnipresence of the party by way of thousands of
cells spread across the country (7,500 local cells and 2,200 professional cells). Hibou
further notes that these cells, situated in residential and business districts fulfilled the
function of “alarm bells” should the “norms not be respected.” Over the parties two
million official members (1 out of every 2 working citizens), the certainty with which one
can fully understand the depth and breadth of the state party’s penetration of society
remains a question, and furthermore, what the official figures really meant. There were
many supporters of the RCD that were not willing members, while some were affiliated
with the party without even knowing it. As previously argued, elaborate explanations to
the RCD’s structure is more or less irrelevant because its “figures were mere conventions,
352 Interview (13.5.31). 353 Interview (6.5.26). 354 Interview (13.5.31).
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where the systemic quantification of the party is part and parcel of the discursive staging
which tried to conceal the absence of any public debate.”355
If a state of tension or crisis emerged, RCD informant’s would report the
situation, and would also be held responsible for it, which might explain the extreme
vigilance and maximum degree of control the state party exerted over all aspects of daily
life. With unrelenting pressure, the RCD cells infiltrated the “life of the district or
village, public places (cafes, bars and cyber cafés), economic and social situations (access
to jobs reception of social programs, activities of associations), and sensitive factions of
the population (young people, the unemployed, former Islamist voters, believers, day
laborers, and of course, illicit street vendors),” coding the entire functional setting of the
Tunisian space by these cells. The locations of these cells were selected not only for the
necessity of keeping them under surveillance but for the necessity of creating a useful
space for the deployment of relations of power.356
The Placebo Effect:
Although Ben Ali eased restrictions on national media in the early years of his presidency
by permitting more newspaper and magazine publications as well as more liberal
guidelines for writers and editors, it was not long before promises to ease freedoms of
speech were reneged. In 1988 the RCD seized copies of a local opposition newspaper for
publishing articles on multiparty politics and judicial law. These two examples ushered
in a period of mass hypocrisy in which the government would maintain a firm
commitment to enhancing freedom of the press by legalizing new newspaper and
355 Hibou, p. 86. 356 Hibou, pp. 86-87.
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magazine publications, while simultaneously arresting journalists and confiscating
material that was considered outside the bounds of legal censorship. A lack of clear
taboo subjects made it impossible to gauge the government’s sensitivities and ultimately
inspired a culture of self-censorship alongside outward policies of media reform.357
Henry describes the state of Tunisia’s public media prior to the revolution as
“deplorable” where journalists functioned as participants to a slow death of the
profession. Outlets of local media like newspapers and magazines were considered
indicators of the regime’s repressiveness in how people were free “not to buy” them for
their sheer lack of real content.358
The progressive limitations on freedom of the press and Internet usage
represented a sad story, where the profession was slowly put to death by “asphyxiation”
throughout the tenure of Ben Ali’s presidency, amid gradual bans on press circulation and
state dominance over media outlets.359 Angrist notes that even though prior to its
downfall the regime had recently made some efforts to improve its political image by
marginally loosening restrictions on the press code, methods of significant constraint
continued to be operative, largely as a result of the industry’s dependence on advertising
revenues from businesses and institutions that could be pressured by the regime if media
outlets fell out of favor.360 The preceding evidence culminates to a clear diagnosis of the
Ben Ali regime’s superficial attempts at masking a repressive status quo where
357 Alexander, Christopher. Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghreb. Routledge: New York, 2010, p. 55. 358 Henry, “Tunisia’s Sweet Little Regime,” pp. 305-306. 359 Ibid., p. 305. 360 Angrist, Michele Penner. “Whither the Ben Ali Regime in Tunisia?” in Bruce Maddy-Weitzman and Daniel Zisenwine, eds., The Maghrib in the New Century: Identity, Religion, and Politics. University Press of Florida: Gainesville, 2007, p. 177.
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expression of political dissent was not tolerated. Those who chose to defy the regime’s
“normalized” version of society risked violations to their civil liberties and livelihood.361
For journalists, researchers, writers and professors who studied media and journalism, the
regime provided them with two choices: either to become a member of the RCD’s
administrative hierarchy; or work elusively on research and other projects that the regime
prohibited, facing explicit inaccessibility to information, and forcing them to devise
creative strategies to bypass the state’s infamous 404 Error message indicating that the
website they were visiting had been blocked362. Even though professional journalists
were not indiscriminately targeted for their profession, research that contradicted the
regime’s official lines, or depicted an alternative image than what the “state-owned
media” (rather than “national media”)363 broadcasted was risky, as one participant
explained. He admitted that he was regularly monitored – and not discreetly – by the
regime if he received emails from external media outlets or from people that the regime
had been keeping tabs on. Anyone who was involved in media or journalism suffered a
lot for the sake of their profession, reconciling half a century of editorial lines drawn by
the state and bound by parameters established “from above,” which perpetuated several
propaganda campaigns intended to glorify the regime and accentuate Ben Ali’s “positive
personality.”364
It should be noted that even four months after the fall of the regime, requests to
participate in this research project were denied by prominent media outlets, very likely as
361 Ibid., p.178. 362 Appendix C-3. 363 Interview (11.5.30). 364 Ibid.
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a result of habitual self-censorship and an unwavering reluctance to report candidly on
subjects that had been prohibited for decades.
The Use of Propaganda:
“It was like we were living in a perfect world, where Ben Ali and his family were Godly,
and everything that was on the radio, on television or in the newspaper was produced to
support this image, and no one could say that it was wrong.”365
A propaganda machine was constantly churning out media that amplified the regime’s
alleged achievements and masked the truth, which interviewees all agreed was never
found in the media.366 As one source noted, everyone knew they were living in a political
masquerade or a “big joke” that no one would dare admit, and for the most part this was
probably true even for the more educated factions of society; given how convinced some
of the more educated participants admitted they had been by the regime’s daily
propaganda, they were certain that Tunisia’s under-privileged and less educated
populations had to believe the positive images that were being broadcasted, since they
were less likely to have access to independent news.367 One interviewee, a well traveled,
affluent and intellectual politician embarrassingly admitted that she had to pinch herself
sometimes to remember not to believe the news she read about the regime, which was
tempting simply because the propaganda was constant and ever-present. Everything that
the country broadcasted, including its contentious statistics pertaining to economic
365 Al Jazeera English. Documentary, “The Arab Awakening: Death of Fear.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8_4OzV8DLw. Uploaded on 06.20.11. 366 Interview (13.5.31). 367 Interview (17.6.2).
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performance had all been tampered with, and that the only way to obtain accurate and
reliable information about the regime was by traveling abroad.368 The state’s powerful
subjugation of independent media and strong propaganda campaign made bypassing the
figurative firewall to questionable information difficult; however, alternative messages to
the status quo were available through informal markets that were not under the control of
the state (although it tried to coopt them) and by way of informative foreign outlets that
offered more realistic news about the country.369
Clandestine Communication:
Given the oppressive picture that was painted by interviewees, I was compelled to further
investigate the means through which society was able to communicate the frustrations
and the dissenting opinions that were clearly present under Ben Ali’s presidency. The
sub currents of communication that flowed below the regime’s networks of informants
and official whistleblowers were critical to amassing the support that was necessary to
unify the country’s uprisings in 2010 and caught my personal interest, since many of the
conversations I had with participants about clandestine communication had very likely
never openly been shared with outsiders until my arrival in-country.
One source immediately responded to this question with a broad statement
depicting a clear moratorium on communication, noting that in Tunisia, you could not
criticize anything that related to the government, because Ben Ali was supposed to have
made all of the decisions and he was responsible for all of the bright ideas for projects
and policies around the country, so criticizing anything would be viewed as a direct
368 Ibid. 369 Interview (11.5.30).
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criticism of him. There was such a high level of fear even among the elites and more
prominent figures in the government that if suggestions were made to improve the
country without the blessing of Ben Ali, they too were susceptible to punishment;
therefore, it was common for all ideas pertaining to national policy, development, the
economy and society to emanate from the president himself, forging a clear link between
Ben Ali and everything that occurred under his watch. The source noted that Tunisia was
worse than China and Syria because you could at least criticize the government in those
countries, just not their leaders.370 This explains Tunisia’s “subtle oppression, through a
kind of soft and vicious approach” that had been considered more effective than the
harder forms or repression that are usually seen in China and Syria. Steven Heydemann
reinforced this assessment in a publication on authoritarianism in the Arab World, when
he included an excerpt from a personal interview that he conducted with a Syrian political
analysts, who stated “Tunisia is our model. Just look at them! They are much more
repressive than we are, yet the West loves them. We need to figure out how they do
it.” 371 Although one source may have naively pointed out that you could get away with
saying “some things” as long as they were not critical and did not violate the law, it is
evident that there were very few things that fell outside of these bounds.
Social Communication:
Communication under the regime was difficult, and most participants acknowledged that
although challenging the regime was a very serious practice, there were some brave
Tunisians who chose to do it regardless of the consequences they would face, thus
370 Interview (17.6.2). 371 Heydemann, Steven, “Upgrading Authoritarianism in the Arab World,” The Brookings Institution, Analysis Paper Number 13, October 2007, p. 1.
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yielding an important rationale: the level of dissent would directly correlate to the
benefits society would gain from hearing the truth.372
The most cited examples of communication under the regime fell into a
clandestine category, where everything had to be said very discreetly, very privately, and
with a high level of consideration for who you were speaking with and who could hear
you.373 Most people discussed the regime with their immediate families or close friends
that had a “certain rank of maturity;” the people they knew and could trust, often at home
or “between the walls” as several interviewees noted. Younger interviewees
acknowledged that their families were often the only true sources for learning about the
regime and recounted the shocks they would sometimes have after learning things from
their families that drastically contrasted with what they heard in school or the media.374
One woman noted that she would always be certain that her cell phone was off and not
anywhere in range of her voice, since it was probably tapped.375 In its most cursory
description, communication during the Ben Ali presidency was not easy, and presented
serious consequences to those who were caught. Participants acknowledged that you had
to trust those you interacted with whom you interacted with your life because the offers
awarded to those who reported dissenters to the regime were enticing. Open criticism
was almost non-existent, except for those who knew and embraced the consequences that
challenging the regime entailed.
Consequently, society was essentially stripped of the substantive or significant
discussions that had once filled the air around the Avenue Habib Bourguiba’s outdoor
372 Interview (3.5.24). 373 Interview (6.5.26). 374 Ibid. 375 Interview (8.5.27).
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cafés.376 One source thought that the limits on communication in the more urban areas
were likely much higher than in the Interior because populations were further away from
the RCD’s epicenter, which lessened its direct control and gave locals more latitude to
broadcast their grievances.377 Outlets of covert communication did exist but were
susceptible to monitoring and heavy scrutiny. They included things like oppositional
media publications, web radio, community televisions, chat television programs, and
external news outlets like al Jazeera and the plethora of resources available in the virtual
public sphere – all accessible via proxy.378
There were informal, less obvious channels of communication that did exist that
were less easy to control, like word-of-mouth communication within selective networks,
gossip, rumors, satire, or jokes. As people grew more familiar with the regime’s levels of
tolerance, they began to devise new strategies that were affective at voicing dissent
without actually saying anything.379 But even these unofficial means, as one woman in
this study highlighted, were eventually suppressed: “people used to whisper in the
beginning, but people were even scared to whisper.” In the beginning of Ben Ali’s
presidency, people would tell jokes to vent their frustrations about the regime, but
towards the end, jokes seemed to disappear from society380; “if you were not part of the
RCD you could not do anything, not even smile.”381 Beyond telling jokes and indulging
in idle gossip, Tunisians were permitted to vent their frustrations through sports, and in
particular, acting out in sports stadiums (as previously noted in Chapter 1), locations that
376 Interview (20.6.3). 377 Ibid. 378 Interview (14.6.1).; Interview (11.5.30). 379 Interview (11.5.30). 380 Interview (17.6.2). 381 Interview (6.5.26).
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the regime had deliberately set aside as venues where exerting the same degree of control
had been less stringent. Sports allowed people to shout, decompress, release their
frustrations, use derogatory language, gather en masse and to relish in a generally
positive energy, things that were essentially banned in normal life. Participants also
noted that more subtle behaviors, like donning a hijaab, growing a short beard, or
frequently traveling outside of the country were other things that people did to express
their discontent.382 In fact, many people traveled outside of Tunisia as a sign of
contestation against the deplorable situation at home. Freedom abroad gave certain
people the courage to express their frustration through media-based or academic
avenues.383 One woman revealed that even when she traveled abroad, she could not
escape the fear that the regime generated. She would be reluctant to read any human
rights publications, or to attend a conference that discussed Tunisia for fear that someone
around her would report her activities – maybe not directly implicating her for such
“treason,” but the threat to her family, friends or colleagues were another matter.384
The universities, although highly regulated and under constant surveillance by the
RCD and the police, were also epicenters for social movements that allowed people to
communicate dissent, albeit in clever ways. Sources allege that there was a small youth
student movement in Tunisia that operated clandestinely outside of the regime’s
knowledge. Members of these movements would discuss things like politics and
governance, often holding informal meetings to question the legitimacy of the regime and
condemn highly sensitive subjects, like dictatorship and corruption.385 One interviewee
382 Interview (16.6.1).; Interview (7.5.27). 383 Interview (14.6.1). 384 Interview (16.6.1). 385 Interview (3.5.24).
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noted that certain universities invited these types of conversations if they reflected the
material that was being taught. Her experience in law school for example, revealed that
professors encouraged open discussions about democracy and the government in Tunisia.
In her common law classes students were allowed to talk about Tunisia in a comparative
context that gave students the freedom to draw differences between constitutions and
forms of government around the world. She confirmed that it was only at the higher
levels of university education where these types of discussions could ever take place
openly.386
Activism Abroad:
A marginal minority did choose to fight and understood their fate; the regime imprisoned,
exiled or killed the political activists.387 The most reliable had to leave the country and
only succeeded in disseminating truthful information about the regime if they were given
an audience abroad. Elaborated further in Chapter 1, some activists stayed in Tunisia and
tried to work within the margins as legal opposition parties. Facing no alternatives, the
decision to function as a controlled political voice was a courageous choice that some
actors made because they still suffered for it, even though they were acting within the
bounds of the law. Legal opposition members were still persecuted, harassed,
bankrupted, imprisoned, and put under constant threat.388
Disregard for Human Rights:
386 Interview (6.5.26). 387 Interview (2.5.23). 388 Interview (8.5.27).
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At the onset of the presidential transition, Ben Ali eased restrictions on the formation of
associations and political organizations. A de facto moratorium was imposed on the
death penalty and several reforms were implemented governing preventative detention, as
well as the use of torture with the ratification of the United Nations Torture
Convention.389 However, despite praises from the international community over Ben
Ali’s apparent revolutionary improvements, reality did not represent a major stride from
the Bourguiba era. For example, prisoners could still be held by the government for up to
18 months, and faced an increasing incidence of the use of torture while in custody. By
2005, the State Department’s annual report on Human Rights Practices stated that
Tunisia’s human rights record remained poor and that it continued to commit serious
abuses, “including torture, abuse of prisoners and detainees, arbitrary arrests and
detention, police impunity, lengthy pretrial and incommunicado detention, infringement
of citizens’ privacy rights, restrictions of freedom of speech and press, and restrictions on
freedom of assembly and association.”390 Many of these citable allegations trace their
sources to the initial targeted campaigns against the regime’s domestic opposition in the
early 1990’s. Henry notes that political prisoners were often singled out for particularly
harsh treatment and that some members of the country’s Islamist party have been jailed
since 1991, many in solitary confinement for protracted periods.391
As previously highlighted in Chapter 1, the regime’s early campaign to quiet the
opposition had been relatively successful, diminishing any legitimate threats to its
political authority. Yet, even during a time of robust political acquiescence, the regime
continued to implement measures to retract individual freedoms that represented a
389 Alexander, Tunisia: Stability and Reform in the Modern Maghrib, p. 53. 390 Henry, “Tunisia’s Sweet Little Regime,” p. 302. 391 Ibid., p. 303.
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potential springboard for dissent. Alexander notes that some of the methods used to co-
opt and manipulate press, unions, and other organizations harkened back to the
Bourguiba days.392 Yet, these very public restrictions cowered to the content of extensive
reports on Tunisia’s deplorable human rights record that reflect some of the more
oppressive and coercive tactics that were used by the regime to quash dissent. In a 2005
report on human rights practices released by the U.S. Department of State, specific
violations reflecting the regime’s predisposition to the use of torture by the police force
were documented, noting an array of techniques brought to the attention of government
officials and human rights watchdogs. Persistent persecution of political opposition
figures and their families was a common trait of the regime’s practice of intimidation.
Although prison conditions improved over the years, the barometer was inherently low,
upgrading them from “spartan” to “poor” and far below international standards.393
Prisoners were not guaranteed the same treatment while in detention, especially given
their political affiliations.394
392 Alexander, Middle East Research and Information Project. 393 Henry, “Tunisia’s Sweet Little” Regime,” p. 302. 394 Ibid., p. 303.
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CHAPTER 5
DÉGAGE: THE DISCOURSE OF DESPERATION
“The Ben Ali regime was like a rotting fruit that was in its last moments before falling
from the tree.”395
A progressive deterioration of political, economic and social conditions had festered and
became palpable by 2010, spreading far beyond the regionalization barriers that had once
kept them contained to Tunisia’s forgotten people in the Interior. This transformation
was clarified through several citable indicators that have been attributed to the regime’s
downward trajectory and eventual demise when surveying the latter years of Ben Ali’s
presidency. These particular data points are frequently highlighted, and contribute to a
culmination of factors that explain the dramatic uprisings in December 2010. A timeline
of relevant occurrences will be introduced that roughly covers a selection of indicators
over a “decade of demise” that aims to organize and explain a sequential and exponential
build-up of tensions that eventually reached levels of unsustainable proportion.
According to Henry, it is not the level of repression per se that has led onlookers
to define the government under Ben Ali as a rogue regime, or even a “highly repressive
one,” but instead the regime is criticized by the “extent at which it deviated from the
expectations of the local and international communities,” which left it highly vulnerable
to internal and international pressures for change. Although the regime had successfully
erected an overbearing bureaucratic and security structure that penetrated all sectors of
395 Interview (3.5.24).
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Tunisian society is argued to have been the greatest source of illegitimacy to the regime,
as it remained unable to modify and control the power of public opinion.396 This
assessment certainly attracts credibility when considering the ultimate fate of Ben Ali
amid mass demonstrations calling for the regime’s downfall. An atmosphere of
oppression was incapable of counteracting widespread public discontent and
dissatisfaction over the government’s subversive policies, perpetual self-indulgence and
apathy to the harsh realities that plagued Tunisian society.
With the benefit of hindsight, we now are able to pinpoint some significant
incidents that occurred well before 2010 that may contribute to a more solid justification
to understanding how and why the political uprisings transpired. Furthermore, there are
several key correlating ingredients that can be cited to explain why the events that
unfolded in Sidi Bouzid attracted the national momentum necessary to introduce such a
dramatic challenge to the political status quo. Although we may find it more convenient,
or perhaps, sufficient to cite sequential data points that cover an approximate two month
period prior to January 14, 2011, interviewees acknowledged several other causes that
explain the Interior’s uprisings, and more importantly, why these uprisings were different
from those that preceded them.
Longevity by Constitutional Reform:
The regime’s crackdown on political freedoms, as noted in previous chapters, is
characterized through a calculated and deliberate crackdown on opposition, situated in a
short-sighted strategy to extract politics from society and reserve it for a privileged few.
396 Henry, Clement, “Tunisia's "Sweet Little Regime,” in Robert Rotberg, ed., Worst of the Worst: Dealing with Repressive and Rogue Nations, Brookings Institution Press, 2007, p. 300.
139
Beyond the regime’s more discreet and clandestine operations that subjugated dissent and
established a never-ending series of political hurdles along a 23-year track, the regime
appears to have lost faith even in its own abilities in the latter years. More skilled
dictators across the region would have likely discouraged Ben Ali’s rigid objection to
political liberalization, which has been a proven and credible strategy to enhance the
longevity of authoritarian regimes with insignificant contraction to regime authority.397
Political reform offers the semblance of enhanced freedoms, instills new confidence
among persistently marginalized opposition actors, and rejuvenates faith that the regime
may be displaying signs of progress in times of entrenched dissatisfaction across society.
However, the Tunisian case introduces a startling contradiction to more rational
approaches offered in the authoritarian handbook, where the regime’s perceived
weaknesses were actually amplified through a handful of very public, legal maneuvers
that underscored Ben Ali’s intentions to remain in power, essentially reaffirming the fears
of a population whose frustrations had been mounting.
In 2009, Ben Ali participated in what many perceived would be his last
presidential elections. Given his age and the assurance that he would retain the office for
at least another five years as stipulated under the constitution, questions began to flourish
across Tunisian society over the future of Tunisian politics and what the next political
transition would look like. People reflected on the future of the presidency and who
would follow in his footsteps (it would surely have been someone from his family), or
397 Brownlee, Jason. Authoritarianism in an Age of Democratization. Cambridge University Press: New York, 2007, p. 6; Heydemann, Steven. “Social Pacts and the Persistence of Authoritarianism in the Middle East,” in Oliver Schlumberger, ed., Debating Arab Authoritarianism: Dynamics and Durability in Nondemocratic Regimes. Stanford University Press: Stanford, 2010, pp. 22-23; Ottaway, Marina. “Evaluation Middle East Reform: Significant or Cosmetic,” in Marina Ottaway and Julia Choucair-Vizoso, eds., Beyond the Façade: Political Reform in the Arab World. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: Washington DC, 2009, pp. 6-9.
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whether more amendments would be made to the constitution to accommodate the
president’s choice to stay.398 He had already introduced groundbreaking amendments to
the constitution years earlier, which set an unsettling example for how the law could be
manipulated to sustain the regime. Reforms made to the constitution under article 39
gradually removed presidential term limits, presenting a legal mechanism and had
allowed Ben Ali to remain in office indefinitely.399 Although there was still a restriction
on the age of the president (capped at 75 years), it was expected that further reforms
would be made to extend the age to Ben Ali’s preference. Furthermore, amendments to
the constitution had been made that prevented the president from being implicated in
charges brought against him following his tenure in office.
2008 Uprisings:
2008 saw an unprecedented expression of defiance against the regime in a series of mass
demonstrations that erupted in the Interior. Echoing the discourse of most Tunisians –
and quoting one in particular – “all of the ingredients that led to the downfall of the
regime were present in the Interior…even back in 2008.”400 That year, several
“ intifadas" (uprisings) occurred which did not predict the events of 2010, but certainly
indicated that the regime was beginning to face serious challenges to its authority, and
that populations living outside of the country’s more privileged areas were no longer
afraid to speak out against the unjust regional neglect that had incrementally forced
people into abject poverty. Interviewees readily acknowledged that the uprisings that
398 Interview (8.5.27). 399 Ibid. 400 Interview (11.5.30).
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occurred in 2008 were a direct result of the government’s policy to deliberately
marginalize areas outside of the Sahel coastal region.401 Historically, the Gafsa Basin
and Kasserine manifest important symbolic and nationalist heritage for their leading role
in Tunisia’s liberation movement from colonial rule; these areas are renowned for
suffering heavy losses to successfully purge the French from the country, reflecting a
disturbing irony where those who had spilled their blood to help liberate the country from
colonial rule, were the same people that had been systematically deprived from economic
development, employment opportunities, or government investment.
In his extensive analysis of the Gafsa Basin’s social movement, Eric Gobe
highlights that it represented the “most important protest movement seen in Tunisia since
the Bread Revolt of January 1984,” and noting within Tunisia’s authoritarian context that
these uprisings showed that “significant segments of the Tunisian population were able to
voice their protest; at the same time, however, the protest movement, due to the limited
support it enjoyed within Tunisian society, was unable to grow, nor was it able to
withstand the coercive policy of Ben Ali’s regime.”402 Interviewees shared this
assessment and believed that these uprisings were actually the impetus for the revolution
that would eventually depose the president, but at that time, they failed to spark the same
reaction or resonate to the degree witnessed in 2010403, in their view because the social
media tools that facilitated communication across the country had not yet been integrated
across society. Because people did not have Facebook yet, the 2008 Interior uprisings
remained relatively isolated and easily contained by the regime. Furthermore, the regime
401 Interview (10.5.30). 402 Gobe, Eric. “The Gafsa Mining Basin between Riots and a Social Movement: meaning and significance of a protest movement in Ben Ali’s Tunisia.” Institut de Recherches et d’Études sur le Monde Arabe et Musulman (IREMAM), 2011. 403 Interview (7.5.27).
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had successfully managed the crackdown by manipulating local clan and tribal rivalries
to prevent the uprisings from spreading with the support of its RCD cells. These events
were significant because they represented an unrelenting and unified front against the
regime that tested its ability to restore order. Although many people died over the eight-
month period, the regime prevented the uprisings from reaching levels beyond its
control.404 Regardless, the fact that these uprisings were able to last for eight months
probably revealed that the regime was weakening and affirmed suspicions that its robust
façade – a well-constructed “paper tiger”405 – was enabling its longevity.
Madame la Présidente:
A particularly malignant and repeatedly cited influence that was responsible for the
regime’s demise was the President’s wife Leila Trabelsi – unofficially commanding the
title Madame la Présidente and officially considered the most loathed person in Tunisia,
described by one source, as a “filthy, greedy whore.” Now a social pariah, “the
politically ambitious first lady was easily the most detested figure in the government; a
monstrous symbol of nepotism and state embezzlement” and the spark of injustice that
ignited the revolution. Her mafia-style control over the country’s economy, controlling
everything from car dealerships to supermarket chains, siphoning off their profits to
support the family's reprehensible spending habits. She has been accused of forcing
people from their homes to claim their land, decorating her palace rooms with the
404 Interview (16.6.1). 405 Interview (5.5.25).
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country’s priceless artifacts, and encouraging her children to fly ice cream in from St.
Tropez to serve at their dinner parties.406
Described as, “the woman responsible for the Arab Spring,” the bête-noir
“inspired dread in the public imagination,”407 a sentiment that festered when it became
clear that she was grooming her husband to take over the presidency either after his death
or foreseeable abdication.408 Her visibility in the media, documenting her participation in
conferences promoting women’s rights infuriated a country that simply saw the regime
spending “tons of money” to fund her forced and growing presence in the public eye.
People saw that she was discreetly hijacking the role of the president, but just over “daily
affairs at the time.”409 Appalled by the appearance of her posters hanging from buildings
next to Ben Ali, some even showing placards with “ar-Ra’eesa” (President) below her
face subtly indicated that she would eventually take control over the country’s politics
and to the country’s detriment, continue the Ben Ali dynasty. One interviewee involved
in opposition politics pointed out that Leila had a whole group of people working with
her to take over the presidency and that it was obvious among ordinary people that she
wanted the position, even though she never explicitly said it. Beyond her audacious
spending habits, arrogant reputation, and illusory political ambitions, her association to
Ben Ali and his passive tolerance for her rapacious habits ultimately contributed to his
downfall. One source highlighted that people were never really sure if Ben Ali even
knew about the Trabelsi family’s corruption, but towards the end, it became evident that
Ben Ali had not only been aware but was involved as well, which damaged his credibility
406 Chrisafis, Angelique. “The Arab World’s First Ladies of Oppression,” The Guardian, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/feb/28/arab-first-ladies-of-oppression?newsfeed=true, 02.28.12. 407 Ibid. 408 Interview (7.5.27).; Interview (6.5.26). 409 Interview (17.6.2).
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even more. Ben Ali Ben had been spared criticism for years over the behavior of his
wife, until she gave birth to a son in 2005 – a clear heir to the Palace throne and
irrefutable proof that Leila Trabelsi would soon become the de facto ruler of Tunisia.410
Waning Support Among Key International Actors:
Interviewees from this study and onlookers alike recognize the influence that
international actors had over ensuring the longevity and stability of the regime, either by
way of positive endorsements from the IFI's, or through opportunistic alliances offered
under the guises of stability and security. The uprisings in 2010 indicate that this support
was vested in sheer convenience for Tunisia’s primary alliances – particularly France and
the United States – and sustained through Ben Ali’s claims that there were no viable
alternatives, specifically when considering his partnership on the “Global War on
Terror.” However, we now know that both France and the United States were growing
more and more aware that the regime was unsustainable, evidenced predominantly in
their inconsistent foreign policy messages during the 2010 uprisings.
In a tell-all novel from France’s former Ambassador to Tunis (2002-2005),
Ambassador Yves Aubin de La Messuzière describes Paris’ foreign policy towards
Tunisia and the complacence that his government showed toward the regime’s oppressive
realities. He reveals that the critical injustices addressed to diplomats in political and
media circles could not have foreseen the ultimate upheaval of Ben Ali’s regime.
Regardless, France had long-held a warm bilateral relationship with Tunisia and that
although the regime’s “weaknesses” with regard to human rights and public liberties were
410 Interview (7.5.27).
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well-known, Ben Ali’s “fight” against Islamists in a post-September 11 world protected
him, regardless of his “style of government.”411 Although it took a popular uprising of
unprecedented proportion to convince the French government that the “certain truths”
that were relayed by their Ambassador were reliable, one can wager that the confusing
messages and seemingly erratic behavior that France displayed in the first two weeks of
Tunisia’s unrest demonstrates that it was beginning to recognize that Ben Ali was not an
indispensable component in Tunisian politics. Sarkozy’s shifting views throughout the
uprisings were powerful indicators that Ben Ali’s foreign support was waning and
probably infused greater momentum to and greater confidence for protesters who saw
that the regime was not being unconditionally buttressed by external powers.412
However, even just days before Ben Ali’s departure, the French Foreign Minister
Michèle Alliot-Marie extolled France’s ties with the Ben Ali regime when addressing the
French National Assembly, claiming that “France [was] ready to provide Tunisia with
France’s security expertise;” on January 15, 2011, one day after Ben Ali fled, 15,000
teargas canisters were shipped from France to Tunisia.413 France’s posture probably
influenced the United States as well, which was rumored to have assisted in Ben Ali’s
departure, supposedly after the US Ambassador realized that there was no way that the
regime could survive and that the longer Ben Ali stayed, the greater the risk was to
Tunisia’s domestic instability, as one interviewee noted.414 US opinion of the regime was
already concerning and suspicions over its sustainability were mounting. Profound
evidence highlighting the United States’ concerns over the regime’s propensity to
411 de la Messuzière, Yves Aubin. Mes Années Ben Ali: Un ambassadeur de France en Tunisie. Cérés editions: Tunis, 2011, pp. 10-11. 412 Interview (20.6.3).; Interview (3.5.24). 413 Jebnoun, Nourredine, Contributing comment. 4.12.12. 414 Interview (8.5.27).
146
corruption and relentless security practices had been revealed just months earlier in the
illicit publication of classified US State Department cables by WikiLeaks, documenting
in explicit detail the arrogance with which the Trabelsis and Ben Alis ruled Tunisia.
These cables indicated that the United States was apparently becoming indifferent of
supporting a ruling family and their entourage whose “quasi-mafia” and corrupt behavior
were viewed akin to Saddam Hussein’s relatives.
WikiLeaks Confirms Corruption:
The uprisings that started generated a reactionary momentum across the country partially
because of the convenient release of the classified cables that revealed telling insight into
the country’s ruling family, including the government’s “bad” politics, such as its
expenses, and even the salary of the president, according to one participant. Although
government corruption was common knowledge in the Tunisian population, specific
figures and quantitative measures that “humanized” it were not. WikiLeaks confirmed
the intricate details and made them accessible to everyone. As one participant explained,
“the country began to boil because it was clear that the government was getting
everything, and the people were getting shit.”415 WikiLeaks exposed “a growing ruling
family and its alliances who were unwilling to stop their desire to take everything in the
regime’s final years;”416 a system of uninhibited thievery and corruption that ultimately
traced directly to the ruling family. Through underground business dealings, a
sophisticated system of patronage and patrimonialism, influential families and political
hardliners were able to be “paid-off” for their support and lack of financial transparency
415 Interview (6.5.26). 416 Interview (16.6.1).
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through monitoring institutions allowed regime leadership to amass enormous sums of
wealth owed to Tunisian taxpayers and earmarked for investment in development
projects.
One source believed that this corruption was the only element that could inspire
such a desperate response by the population, explaining that “the downfall of the regime
was based on Ben Ali’s economic corruption, not on more social issues like freedom of
speech.”417 Another informant initially alleged that WikiLeaks proved that Ben Ali had
been running a “rogue state” but then changed her mind immediately to a mafia state,
explaining that leaders of a rogue state at least have morality and try to advance the state.
In Tunisia’s mafia state, Ben Ali did not care about developing the country; he was only
concerned about developing his family.418
By 2010, the corruption that had systematically been forcing marginalized
populations into poverty revealed that the regime had reaped tens of billions of dollars.
What became even clearer was that there was not one family in Tunisia that was not
affected by these practices at a certain time. Most chose to passively reconcile their
misfortune, while others abandoned their homeland in search of better lives outside of
Tunisia. The regime stole from you regardless of your class, wealth, prestige, politics,
education, or religion. For one man in particular, the exploitation had reached a level that
became so unbearable, the only way he could escape the humiliation, hopelessness and
despair; the pitiful remnants left by a regime that literally sucked the life out of the
country and its people, was to take his own life in a tragic display of self-martyrdom.
Muhammad Bouazizi’s last words explain his decision; after dousing himself with
417 Interview (11.5.30). 418 Interview (16.6.1).
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benzene after attempting to recover the scales he needed to sell fruit, he shouted “how do
you expect me to make a living?” before setting himself alight, reflecting a paradox that
was well understood across the country.419
Muhammad Bouazizi: “His Case was Our Case:”420
Although it has been argued that there were many factors that culminated in the Tunisian
revolution, Muhammad Bouazizi’s “political suicide” was certainly a catalyst that
resonated as a broader sign of contestation against, among other things, Tunisia’s dire
unemployment situation, which directly stemmed from the country’s political corruption.
Bouazizi’s demonstration underscored an inextricable linkage between unemployment
and politics that revealed an unmistakable attribution that issues like unemployment,
limited opportunities and poverty could be traced back to the failed economic policies of
Ben Ali’s government.421 His action “flipped a switch” that set anticipated events in
motion that had been stymied for decades.422 Most interviewees remarked that the tragic
act of self-immolation was not something new, and that in fact it had happened just a
month earlier but failed to inspire the same response across the country. Bouazizi’s
example was “relatable” because he attempted to work within the arbitrary bounds of the
state that overshadowed society, but he was rebuffed and directly challenged by a female
police officer – a de facto extension of the RCD’s oppression. Regardless of the exact
circumstances behind the dispute over his license to operate a fruit and vegetable cart,
people understood his frustrations in trying to live in a country where non-affiliation to
419 Interview (16.6.1). 420 Interview (6.5.26). 421 Interview (14.6.1). 422 Interview (3.5.24).
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the state party meant an unrelenting struggle to survive, even if you followed the rules.423
Bouazizi’s spontaneous reaction to his subordinate reality reflected deeper and repressed
conceptions of state oppression that were suddenly unleashed across the country in
reaction to his desperate action, which has made it the event that has been attributed to
the beginning of the subsequent revolution.424
Bi Kuli Hazim – Unrest Returns to the Interior:
Tunisia’s regional imbalance of development also explains this dramatic response to
Bouazizi’s self-immolation in the Interior that suffered from uneven development and
government investment.425 The people in the “forgotten” Interior were much poorer and
deprived from government attention compared to the Sahel coastal regions, and the
perception that many had was that the country’s “general division” readily meant that
people in the Interior had fewer jobs, and limited opportunities. Thus, it was no surprise
that Bouazizi’s action resonated across Tunisia’s more disadvantaged population.426
After just 10 days, the riots spread from Sidi Bouzid – the hometown of Bouazizi
– to the country’s powder keg in the Interior.427 For one interviewee, it became clear that
once the uprisings had spread from Sidi Bouzid, it was certain that the regime would
eventually collapse; he thought Ben Ali had six months.428 What had once been handfuls
of people that resorted to more primitive methods of retaliating against government
423 Interview (6.5.26). 424 Interview (20.6.3). 425 Ibid. 426 Ibid. 427 Interview (11.5.30). 428 Ibid.
150
forces by throwing rocks at police – which led them to be shot429 had evolved into
organized, sizable masses of protesters that appeared un-phased by the regime’s brutal
retaliation.
As it had traditionally done in the past, the regime bombarded growing crowds by
using live fire and riot control police to physically break up the demonstrations430, which
led to the deaths of 20 men, women and children from Kasserine – intended as a lesson in
terror on the part of the regime, but one that ultimately failed to deter demonstrators.
Previously, smaller protests in the Interior were easy to crush, but as one woman
indicated, Bouazizi’s act meant that the “message was out,” and the regime’s violent
reaction only inspired more crowds to go out into the streets.431 The protests continued
and began to spread from Kasserine to other key locations and stretched the regime’s
personnel and resources to an unprecedented extent. One participant noted that even
though there were many people who supported Ben Ali, the Tunisian people began to see
the idea of a “hero” in everyone that stood up against him and explains how the
momentum was sustained and continued to grow.432 During the initial days of the
uprisings, the regime responded with a very “hard” discourse through state-owned
television, indicating that those responsible for instigating these uprisings would be
severely punished. However, the regime’s blatant recognition of the uprisings and its
willingness to broadcast images of events in the Interior was a response that had never
been witnessed before and indicated that the regime knew it was in trouble.433
429 Interview (2.5.23). 430 Ibid. 431 Interview (20.6.3). 432 Interview (3.5.24). 433 Interview (11.5.30).
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Even the regime’s leadership recognized that the size and character of the
demonstrations had grown beyond historic thresholds, and that the uprisings were
escalating beyond what onlookers could describe as the regime’s comfort-zone (reaching
a “culminant point” to reference Clausewitz) – the point at which the ability to quell
dissent through standard mechanisms of repression had been reached. The dissatisfaction
over shared grievances across the country’s interior had reached a monumental and
unprecedented resonance and warranted a more personalistic contribution from the
president himself. Ben Ali’s visit to the hospital to show his support for Bouazizi’s
situation (although he had probably already died by this point) highlighted the impact of
self-immolation and the profound power that wielded as a form of protest. Yet, Ben Ali’s
foolish photo opportunity backfired because he was seen as disingenuous in his sympathy
for the tragic death of one of his subjects. If anything, it proved that the unrest had
caught the attention of the regime and that it needed to respond to dissent in more
innovative ways than the use of force.434
New Communication Reveals Shared Grievances:
“People don’t stand up to tyranny unless there is a universal grievance”435
Beyond the notions that political freedom and unemployment were the more poignant
grievances that most Tunisians shared and should be considered explanations to how the
revolution spread across the country, interviewees offered additional input on how to
434 Interview (20.6.3). 435 Interview (13.5.31).
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conceptualize the “collective grievances,” Tunisians shared when living under Ben Ali
and further describe how the ideas of revolution spread so dramatically.
For most, the deplorable economic situation defined their lives. One source
claimed that everyone in the country was suffering from the poor standard of living,
stating that “when you are poor, you can’t do anything. You can’t live your life, get
married, go out with your friends, nothing.”436 Even those who had jobs or who had been
fortunate enough to live in the more privileged areas of the country claimed that salaries
and the standard of living were not equal. Products were extremely expensive and highly
inflated compared to just average salaries, which made it impossible to save money.437
The limits that were imposed on society under a mechanism of economic constraint did
not match expectations, which for many were formulated by what they saw around them.
Tunisians, for the most part, were highly educated and had knowledge of the outside
world. The political sacrifices that the population had made to sustain a more agreeable
social contract in support of welfare and an enhanced quality of life had been for nothing,
and it became clear that they were no longer willing to tolerate the lives that they had
settled for.438 As participants explained, it became a question over how long were they
going to continue to remain silent.439 The uprisings became “a call of heart, wisdom, and
brain;” after so many years of saying yes to Bourguiba and Ben Ali, people felt
humiliated and knew it was time to speak out.440
After two days, the events that occurred in Sidi Bouzid were being discussed in
Tunis, where one source noted how a group of colleagues were so surprised by the
436 Interview (6.5.26). 437 Ibid. 438 Interview (3.5.24). 439 Interview (8.5.27). 440 Interview (5.5.25).
153
courage displayed by the protesters and how they were not afraid to confront the
police.441 The regime’s capacity of repression should not be underestimated, and one
source noted in those very early days that he was certain that the protests would be
brought to the same violent end as they had in the Gafsa Basin in 2008.442 However, the
popular grievances of those living in the Interior – corruption, lack of opportunity, lack of
freedom – had finally translated to the Sahel. The courage that emanated from the
Interior gave people across the country the confidence they needed to examine their own
misfortunes, and to question whether or not the sacrifices they had made for the
“regionalized advantages” they had accepted were actually worth Ben Ali’s support. A
lot of people joined the movement including lawyers, teachers, professors and unions,
which helped it spread from the Interior to the Sahel, and demands quickly shifted from
concerns over dignity and work, to Ben Ali’s departure from politics.443 Broad
recognition that expectations were not met proved that Ben Ali’s injustice had spread
across all politics and all industries, prompting everyone to go into the streets during the
revolution;444 this included the capital Tunis, where hundreds of thousands of people
moved en masse to Habib Bourguiba Avenue, a display that had never happened
before.445 Sources note that the regime could not respond to such a vast number of
people congregating at once in different parts of the country, possible only by the “speed
of communication and its popular capitalization.” The revolution would never have
441 Interview (11.5.30). 442 Ibid. 443 Interview (8.5.27). 444 Interview (3.5.24). 445 Interview (2.5.23).
154
occurred without the use of new modes of critical communication to spread the message
and universalize the movement.446
“Merci Facebook:” The Role of Social Media:447
The Internet was crucial and enabled an unprecedented level of communication and
access to information through websites like: Anonymous, WikiLeaks, Facebook, and You
Tube.448 Broadcasting pictures and videos of Bouazizi’s self-immolation vividly
depicted the reality of his desperation and facilitated and overpowered a severed physical
linkage between the Sahel and the Interior that the regime had tried to sustain.
Depictions of the regime’s failed development and investment programs in the Interior
that had long been based on rumors were clarified by online activists who continued to
post information that espoused the regime’s failures and defended those who suffered
because of them. Traditional strategies to physically contain the Interior were no longer
affective, since the rest of the country could now see what was actually happening – a
critical transition that the government had never planned to control.
Prior to the onset of the uprisings, communication that occurred on very public
and widespread forums like Facebook or You Tube did not appear as threatening to the
regime because these particular forums were not politically oriented. The communication
had been occurring between “normal” people, not political activists; therefore, the regime
could not allege that they were political dissenters and ironically, anyone who chose to
make negative comments against the regime did not feel under threat because they were
446 Interview (8.5.27). 447 Appendix C-4. 448 Interview (6.5.26).
155
not affiliated with the regime’s prescribed “opposition.” This communication slowly
began to “destabilize and shake” the foundations of the regime. Technology and
information diluted the regime and prevented it from “keeping secrets”449 and provided
the valuable evidence that a lot of people needed to prove that Ben Ali had failed.450
Although self-immolation and other desperate suicidal acts had happened before,
limited penetration of social media across the population prevented people from knowing
about it. By 2010, Bouazizi’s self-immolation sparked a flurry of online activism,
manifested in the “Facebook post,” video clips, and the use of a “Like” link to facilitate
information sharing and national exposure to content that outpaced, overrode, and
challenged the government’s propaganda narrative.451 Social media and improved
telecommunications became political for the first time and allowed people to get honest
information quickly. One woman reflected on her own experience as a cyber activist
during the revolution, claiming that she did not sleep for two months and that more
privileged participants in the revolution adopted the role of communication facilitators.
The bravery and sacrifices that “their brothers and sisters” were showing from their
participation in the uprisings compelled the cyber activists to share their struggle and to
make sure that they did not “miss the opportunity to bring about this positive change” in
Tunisia.452 The sense of national unity was underscored by the use of social media, and
how everyone adopted a specific role in support of the movement. This was particularly
true for Tunisia’s youth population. When before it appeared that the young people were
not politicized or interested in anything now seems to be untrue because the revolution
449 Interview (14.6.1). 450 Interview (3.5.24). 451 Interview (10.5.30). 452 Interview (5.5.25).
156
showed that they were actually more aware. And for the first time as one source noted,
social media rejuvenated the youth generation that had suffered the most from the
regime’s neglect – “rendering them jobless, disempowered, incapable of marrying, and
unable to afford even the most mediocre lives” – proving to the country that their
suffering, which had been misdiagnosed as political apathy was actually incorrect.453
The important role that social networking tools played in facilitating rapid
communication across the country cannot be overstated, and probably represents one of
the indisputable distinguishing factors that isolates these particular uprisings from those
that had occurred previously; however, the role of social media is a “big subject,” and as
highlighted by one interviewee, it is certain that social media “cannot invent the real
world.” Social media has to be grounded in something real, and consequently did not
play a unilateral role in Tunisian politics, it provided logistical support.454 We cannot
forget or discount the role of people when discussing Tunisia’s political transformation.
La’a Khowfa B’ada al-Youm: 455
Identifying the impetus for revolution and the point at which a population is willing to die
rather than continue to live under oppression is a quagmire that this investigation does not
attempt to unravel; however, there is no question that a popular “breaking point” had
been reached in December 2010. As one participant noted, the uprisings were like a
“wave that crashed on the shores of the country,” and although “no one knew how it got
there, they controlled, oriented and used it.” A culmination of information made
453 Interview (16.6.1). 454 Interview (11.5.30). 455 Appendix C-5.
157
available by international press and WikiLeaks helped and made people aware of the
regime’s vast corruption. Simultaneously, social media tools spread images that showed
how the very poor were suffering. Things happening in the Interior for the first time
reflected conditions everywhere and “represented the drop of water that made the glass
overflow.” The hungry people in forgotten areas in the Interior had been telling the truth
for years and were finally being heard and did not care how far their voices carried, how
loud they were, or whether the regime heard them anymore.456 Sources stated that the
situation had become so disgusting that people no longer felt fear and457 were ready for
anything, whether gunshots or death. “After thousands overcame their fear, revolution
was inevitable”458 because too many people had nothing to lose anymore. When facing
unemployment, despondence, and humiliation, what is the value in life?459 The “wall of
fear” that confined public interest had been torn down by the population.460 Death was
no longer a deterrent to dissent.461
Ben Ali’s “Spanish Castle:”
Although we can clearly identify the factors that led the population to challenge the
regime’s credibility and openly oppose its rule, it is equally critical to devote space to
understanding the regime’s behavior in an attempt to explain its inadequate response to
popular opposition, by answering lingering questions over how a seemingly
indestructible regime could collapse in just 28 days. Popular uprisings of such an
456 Interview (5.5.25). 457 Ibid. 458 Al Jazeera English. Documentary, “The Arab Awakening: Death of Fear.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8_4OzV8DLw. Uploaded on 06.20.11. 459 Interview (8.5.27). 460 Interview (13.5.31). 461 Interview (10.5.30).
158
unprecedented caliber seriously tested the durability of a regime that had long advertised
a powerful exoskeleton of oppression. However, to underscore the unconcealed shock
described in first-hand accounts, the regime appears to have been unable to manage the
influences that were threatening its own internal durability.
The Personalities:
Conflicting internal dynamics at the political apex had deteriorated to levels that were
unsustainable, specifically when considering the competing personalities of the ruling
families and their conceited posturing to attain and exert political influence. The family
members that had traditionally been content with reaping the financial benefits of being
close to the regime were gradually vying for political positions, including the president’s
brother-in-law and son-in-law. Competition within the family led to an unhealthy
polarization of political authority that reverberated across the government and ultimately
fragmented a once, consolidated group of elites.462
The Speeches: Ben Ali’s Personal Touch
The regime’s reaction to the increasing level of dissent in 2010 was badly orchestrated
and made it appear as though no one in the government really even knew what was
happening, exacerbated further by Ben Ali’s famous trilogy of speeches that only
alienated him further from an irreconcilable population. After visiting Bouazizi in the
hospital, Ben Ali gave his first speech in which he threatened to quell dissent violently
because it would not be tolerated and was against the law. Although participants
admitted that people were nervous over the extent to which the regime would carry out its 462 Interview (7.5.27).
159
threats, his reference to an arbitrary rule of law undermined his legitimacy and reaffirmed
his sheer ineptitude to the source of the country’s uprisings, inspiring people to return to
the streets the next day.463 People charged that his speech had insulted them and
undermined their demands. For the Tunisian people it was only about his removal – a
non-negotiable term that they were prepared to die for. His pleas to the country in his
second and third speeches promising that he would not run for another presidential term,
that he understood the demands of his jobless and needy citizens, and that he felt betrayed
by the people he had dedicated his life to serve, but they meant nothing to a country that
had “heard it all before.”464 The political uprisings that were sweeping the country had
evolved to represent more than the overthrow of the president, but the dismantling and
reconstruction of the entire system that had failed them.
The Structure:
Structurally, it had been revealed with the dramatic demise of the regime that domestic
policy had always had fragile and weak foundations. Had the people known what else
was going other than domestic policy the revolution would have happened earlier, but
could have been more violent, since the visible deterioration of the regime’s authority had
been apparent in its latter years.465 One informant noted that the whole regime was
“make-believe,” like a Spanish castle466, outwardly stable, sturdy and prolific, but when
you remove one card the precarious and fragile structure completely collapses This
particular “card” happened to be Ben Ali, whose own design of rule that ensured he
463 Interview (10.5.30). 464 Ibid. 465 Interview (8.5.27). 466 Interview (17.6.2).
160
would sustain an indispensable presence at the regime’s core, guaranteed its downfall
when he was forced from power. Furthermore, his supremacy at the summit of the
regime’s political pyramid left it haphazardly vulnerable to the decision-making of one
individual in times of crisis, and in this crisis, Ben Ali’s assessment of the uprisings had
been misguided. Un-preparedness and miscalculation define the four weeks as the
regime struggled to respond to the forces that were weakening it, and led observers to
highlight the severe lack of coordination and inability to respond affectively to those
forces can be attributed ironically to Ben Ali’s preferred “one-man” system of rule.467
The standard protocol of employing the use of force against dissent was also challenged
internally, which surprised the president and left him scrambling to establish
constituencies.468
RCD OUT:469
There were also clear indications that the president’s loyalty had been waning, evidenced
by his approach to leadership organization and his propensity to sacrifice loyalty to
alleviate his personal paranoia. The president was very good at creating tension between
elites in the government because he never trusted anyone, often compelling him to put
ranking officials against each other and shuffling them throughout his cabinet to prevent
anyone from establishing a loyal power base. Recognizing the need to remain close to
the president to avoid alienation, government elites would constantly be competing for
his favor or trying to maneuver to advance their own political mobility, which ultimately
detracted from the regime’s robustness and fostered a clear lack of cohesion even at the
467 Ibid. 468 Interview (20.6.3). 469 Appendix C-6.
161
highest levels of leadership.470 This dynamic appeared to reflect the RCD’s confidence in
the president’s ability to sustain power, and as we now know, their overall allegiance to
him as the uprisings outpaced the regime’s efforts to suppress them. Not only were
internal politics in the regime introducing new questions over Ben Ali’s ultimate role in
the regime’s future, but the layer of support around the regime was thinning471 because
people in the regime were also no longer willing to support it.472 For example, his own
party did not react to the uprisings by organizing counter protests in favor of the regime
or initiating campaigns to endorse a new political solution. The RCD’s inaction proved
that the ruling family’s most critical allies had abandoned its politics and kleptocratic
habits.473 One participant believed that the RCD gave up on him because its allegiance to
Ben Ali had really never been about personal loyalty, but as previously noted, was about
greed, self-interest and corruption.474 Recent revelations of the former Presidential
Security Chief confirm this point. He pointed out that Ben Ali had never trusted anyone,
especially the RCD machine. To ease his paranoia and ensure control Ben Ali infiltrated
the RCD through the Presidential Guard (PG), which became responsible for drafting
reports on the RCD leadership and membership, as well as the top bureaucrats within the
administration.
Every family in the country had been victimized by the ruling family’s rampant
corruption which explains how even members of the RCD just grew disgusted by the
status quo, especially since their compliance in sustaining the regime no longer awarded
them the benefits that had seduced them in the past. For the upper echelons of
470 Interview (17.6.2). 471 Interview (2.5.23). 472 Interview (5.5.25). 473 Interview (10.5.30). 474 Interview (3.5.24).
162
government, corruption had spread from the economy into a discomforting level in the
political system as well, especially after 2009 as one source noted.475 A combination of
fear and paranoia no longer made even the most powerful politicians in the country
immune to Ben Ali’s coercive authority. One interviewee said that Ben Ali’s ministers
could not disagree or even resign from office because they were afraid that it would be
viewed as a sign of contestation to the president’s legitimacy and the consequences to
them or their families could be serious. This system led even the most disenchanted
Tunisians to recognize that the government’s honest people had been forced to support
him or to simply leave the country.476 Reflecting the higher levels of the party’s
constituency, the RCD’s spy networks began weakening when it became clear that the
attractive benefits that had once been a fundamental basis for the regime’s recruitment
strategy were diminishing. The margins of greed and self-indulgence had reached such
high levels that even the regime’s fragile support system embodied in the RCD had been
robbed of the goodies that had assured their allegiance. Sources explained that people in
the ruing party recognized that the information they shared about opponents of the regime
only contributed to supporting the single family that they had begun to despise.477
Economic Syndicates – Political Affairs no Longer a Priority:478
Despite being heavily embedded in the regime, the economic syndicates that had initially
refused to participate in the uprising eventually demonstrated their support by passively
disseminating guidance that encouraging local branches to make their own decisions in
475 Interview (7.5.27). 476 Interview (5.5.25). 477 Interview (10.5.30). 478 Interview (3.5.24).
163
late December 2010. Lack of clear authority gave most of these local branches (headed
by RCD loyalists) a degree of freedom that they had never exercised and participated in
the uprisings by announcing strikes, disrupting the economy, and fueling the masses in
the streets. The UGTT amplified the momentum of the protests especially under the
advisement of coordinated branches in the interior municipalities, like Le Kef, Gafsa and
Kasserine. One participant noted that the participation of the syndicate was particularly
damaging to the regime because the government did not have enough resources to
suppress the widespread dissent it was encouraging479, as though the UGTT had set
multiple fires that were burning around the country at the same time, making it much
more difficult to send security forces to arrest the leaders responsible for the uprisings or
those participating in them.480
Attempted Coup?:
Further indications that the regime was facing serious struggles from within reflects the
overwhelming perception among participants that Ben Ali did not flee the country on his
own terms, but that the collapse of his regime ultimately stemmed from “internal
ambiguities”481 and likely, a coup de palais that occurred alongside the revolution in the
streets.482 The circumstances of January 14, 2011 to this day remain unclear and as one
source claimed, made everyone in the government very “dizzy.” The most compelling
evidence that a coup probably took place is seen in the arrest of the director of the
479 Interview (10.5.30). 480 Interview (20.6.3). 481 Interview (17.6.2). 482 Interview (16.6.1).
164
president’s personal security guard, Seriati for his alleged involvement (rumored with the
Trabelsi family) to carry out a coup against Ben Ali.483
Army Rejects Order to Fire on Protesters:
The fact that the army did not follow the regime was another critical factor.484 According
to one woman, if the army had supported Ben Ali then the revolution would have never
happened. One interviewee noted that Ben Ali did not privilege the army during his
regime, that the army suffered a lot during his presidency, and that it maintained a strong
grudge against him. The army was not as well trained or well equipped as those in other
Arab countries. In total, the army contained only about 36,000 people and had been
responsible predominantly for civil activities since independence. Ben Ali played a
pivotal role in keeping the army weak so that it never had the option to influence
politics.485 For example, one interviewee alleges that he was so paranoid that the army
would turn against him that he dispatched the PG to spy on the Army as well, but it
seems that reports written on the armed forces were ineffective due to the inability of the
PG to infiltrate the chain of command and to understand the modus operandi of the
Army’s leadership.486 One interviewee believed that Ben Ali had been responsible for
shooting down a helicopter filled with several high officials from the army in 2002 even
though we now know that it was a mechanical accident. For security, Ben Ali preferred
to rely on his PG that amounted to several thousand (which nobody knew about) and his
483 Interview (10.5.30).; Interview (16.6.1). 484 Interview (16.6.1). 485 Interview (14.6.1). 486 Jebnoun, Contributing comment. 4.12.12.
165
omnipresent police “dogs” who did shoot at the protesters.487 Since the army had been
conscripted from the people – many in fact from the more impoverished and neglected
areas of the country that were leading the uprisings – it maintained its loyalty to the
people and refused to shoot.488
Expecting the Unexpected:
Although the factors that led to the downfall of the Ben Ali regime are relatively
identifiable, a more challenging question that this investigation hopes to answer is a
temporal one: why now? Some participants did not fully equate their personal response
to the self-immolation of Bouazizi, or even view him as the real catalyst for Ben Ali’s
ultimate demise; rather, Bouazizi’s particular case – one that embodies the regime’s
exploitation of dignity, humility and self-worth – was just one of many factors that
inspired a national resonance that eventually amplified beyond the imagination or
conception of even the Tunisian people themselves.
As events unfolded, people were not shocked that another round of uprisings had
emerged in the Interior, but there was a feeling that things were different this time. There
were new doubts over the future of the regime and indications that it was near the end; no
one knew when it would collapse, or ultimately how, but people never thought that it
would only end as a result of a popular reaction or struggle; people did not think seriously
that a popular uprising would be the reason. It had long been assumed that the regime
487 Interview (8.5.27). 488 Interview (10.5.30).
166
would last until Ben Ali died, because he was sick. And if he did die, no one really knew
who would succeed him.489
Although there is no clear answer to why the revolution took place when it did,
interviewees recognized that these uprisings were different because they were leaderless,
unified, spontaneous and the product of broad converging forces. For most, what
happened in January 2011 was completely surprising and had the regime been aware of
its ultimate fate, the uprisings would have been crushed because that is what the regime
normally did.490 One woman believed that Ben Ali was such a coward for leaving after
just one month.491 Nearly all participants highlighted the significance that a coordinated
process that had no real direction occurred this time that has not occurred before, which
was largely guided by information spread through mass media like, Al Jazeera, satellites,
phones, social networking sites and other new modes of communication.492 Access to
information and the power of universal self interest converged at a unique and fantastical
point on the historic timeline and enabled the revolution to advance successfully. Finally,
informants note that the pace of the expansion of unrest was perfectly gradual, which
deceived the government and prevented it from reacting too violently or fast enough to
quash dissent.493
489 Interview (7.5.27). 490 Interview (2.5.23). 491 Interview (5.5.25). 492 Interview (3.5.24). 493 Interview (10.5.30).
167
CHAPTER 6
THE AFTERMATH
“The Ben Ali regime was like an infection. Once you treat it, you have to wait for it to
heal.”494
The previous assessment proves that there is not one single factor that can be isolated to
explain the downfall of the Ben Ali regime in Tunisia, but rather, that a multitude of
converging catalysts led to what the scholarship would assert was the ultimate removal of
an authoritarian dictator in a country that was least likely to spawn a revolution. The Ben
Ali regime was marred by flaws: clear fissures in the political structure; the despicable
behavior of an increasingly complacent ruling family; pervasive corruption; nepotism;
and brutal suppression of individual freedoms. Although these particular indicators can
be identified with the benefit of hindsight, the factors that we now know contributed to
Ben Ali’s ultimate demise remain insufficient to explain the regime’s endurance,
specifically questioning how the fallen president’s departure from power did not transpire
decades earlier amid such widespread dissatisfaction. Thus, we are compelled to
question why and how did a regime that had ultimately withered away by the nature of its
own corrosive elements endure and affectively radiate the image of resilient durability for
23 years? Several answers were proposed by participants in this research study, which
leaves the reader to believe that the regime’s longevity stemmed from a combination of
the following factors.
494 Interview (5.5.25).
168
• Ben Ali’s Party Politics: Some have argued that simply because Ben Ali was an
alternative to an increasingly unpopular Bourguiba, people were willing to give
him a chance to follow through with the initial promises that he made
immediately following his rise to the presidency. The transition period marked a
hopeful alternative to the latter years of Bourguiba’s presidency, which had
largely been tainted by a more consolidated variant of authoritarian rule and a
crackdown on personal freedoms and civil liberties. Ironically, it would be the
apparent pluralism in the National Pact signed by a wide spectrum of the political
opposition groups that would ultimately determine their exclusion from politics;
they were given no guarantees that the ensuing political system would welcome
their inclusion, or that declarative opposition to the regime had “outted” them as
dissenters, inhibiting their ability to openly challenge the regime leaving them
susceptible to harassment. Ben Ali had successfully isolated the more prominent
political actors that had emerged under and silenced them under false pretenses,
severely diminished the threats that political actors could pose to his authority.495
Furthermore, one observer noted that the Tunisian people had failed to see the
“pre-screened film” that began its production during Bourguiba’s presidency,
when Ben Ali’s true sentiments towards the Islamists were revealed by his
participation in their persecution as the Interior Minister. The president’s
inconsistent policy towards Ennahda throughout the National Pact negotiations,
followed by his initial campaign to target Islamists were policies that were
essentially neglected by the population and failed to encourage regime 495 Interview (11.5.30).
169
accountability. As a result, we now know that uninhibited Islamist repression was
actually an impetus for a more habitual practice adopted by the regime against all
opposition groups or contestation that followed.496 It is uncertain whether
Islamists should be considered Ben Ali’s “trial variable” in a greater experiment
against the opposition, but his initial efforts to dismantle their networks and limit
their influence were successful, and probably contributed to his decision to pursue
other targets.
• International Security Concerns Trump Despotic Rule: It is important to
devote some attention to the role of external actors to explain the durability of
Arab authoritarian regimes in general, a policy to which Tunisia was certainly not
excluded. Both the United States and France are accused of turning a blind
diplomatic eye to the intensification of authoritarianism under Ben Ali in order to
pursue their own national interests, often to a significant detriment to the Tunisian
people. Specifically, these countries shied away from policies that condemned
some of the more unsavory characteristics of the regime, including its, reliance on
the security apparatus, affinity to secret police surveillance, deplorable human
rights record, use of torture and coercion, corrupt justice system, economic
favoritism, and absence of rule of law. For the United States, the regime’s firm
stance against Islamists, marked by their forced exclusion from the political
system and the regime’s secularization policies, underscored Tunisia as a valuable
regional security partner. Ben Ali’s cooperation on larger foreign policy priorities
of the United States, including mitigating the Arab-Israeli peace process and 496 Interview (11.5.30).
170
endorsing measures suitable to economic growth by the IFI’s further contributed
to the regime’s external support. For the French, concerns revolved around
Tunisia’s local economic opportunities and their activism on illegal immigration
to the Northern Mediterranean. The unrelenting international support for
authoritarian regimes in the Arab World and their unrestrained use of coercion at
the hands of an obtrusive security apparatus is offered as a “crucial explanation
for their competitive longevity in global terms.”497 But after the terrorist attacks
on September 11, 2001, indications that the regime’s endurance may have been
waning were shattered amid new pledges of financial, political, and military
support in favor of entrenching a convenient and cooperative government that
would tote the West’s anti-Islamist line. Ben Ali’s regime grew stronger because
of this external support, raising its fledging life expectancy and diminishing any
potential for accountability for its habitual oppression.498 As one international
observer noted, peace and stability should not be overlooked when thinking about
Ben Ali’s presidency (regardless of the means by which these were achieved) just
for the fact that they actually existed, which is not a very common occurrence in
the region.499 Ben Ali justified his Draconian style of governance to the
international community as a necessary measure to prevent Tunisia from
plummeting into instability. This relationship founded on national security
interests rather than a respect for human rights or democracy promotion was
“shameful, and disgraceful” according to one interviewee, who noted that it is
unfortunate how the West failed to intervene over the moral standards that they
497 Angrist, p. 187. 498 Interview (11.5.30). 499 Interview (20.6.3).
171
normally champion but instead funneled hundreds of millions of dollars to the
bank accounts of despotic leaders, rather than their subjects.500 Observers noted
that for 23 years, there was no serious alternative that could challenge Ben Ali
internally, largely because the international community supported the apparatus
that prevented opposition from affectively operating. Trade, security, and
defending an image that Tunisia challenged regional deficits in economic
development, education and social welfare, were all benefits that the Tunisia
international allies favored at the expense of the Tunisian people.501 In the last
ten years, the regime began to weaken from a failing economic model, growing
political resentment, and insufficient social services.502
• Democracy After Stability: Following Bourguiba’s presidency, which in its
latter years, had failed to avoid a regional economic downturn, the priorities of
most Tunisians had been readjusted to reflect more personal concerns, like
resolving “debts and personal struggles” rather than politics, which had never
been a major concern for most people since their needs were met under
Bourguiba’s social contract, according to one source.503 Interests lied in restoring
a favorable economy and reintroducing national stability, instead of pressuring the
new president to follow-through with his initial tendencies toward democracy.
People recognized that democracy could not occur without stability, and it
appeared that Tunisians were willing to wait for democracy until the economy
500 Interview (13.5.31). 501 Interview (11.5.30). 502 Interview (14.6.1).; Interview (16.6.1). 503 Interview (7.5.27).
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improved and the aftermath of the political transformation stabilized before the
country’s political future was discussed. Proving that the economy would reach
an acceptable level of “success” is difficult to assess objectively. Whether
economic liberalization is a sine qua non to democracy is contested in the
literature but at least provides an explanation in this particular case for a certain
exclusionary political latitude offered to the regime. It is evident now that the
failure to hold Ben Ali accountable to his initial promises for pluralism provided
him the time needed to execute a well-constructed plan to secure his hold on
power, while simultaneously neglecting attention to policies intended to develop
and improve the economy. Although security is often cited as a positive initiative
during Ben Ali’s presidency (not surprising under a police state), by the early
2000s, the regime’s credibility was further questioned following a terrorist attack
in the eastern island of Jerba, which proved that the only real achievement the
regime could highlight was no longer relevant.504
• Development without Democracy: The social and political costs were very high
under a national policy that intended to centralize development to a key group of
decisions-makers who were responsible for carrying out plans to develop the
country’s infrastructure and social services. Ben Ali exploited national concerns
over Bourguiba’s failed economy and emphasized underdevelopment in critical
industries and services across Tunisia to garner broad support for the country’s
retraction from politics in exchange for the regime’s focus on development –
504 Interview (14.6.1).
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essentially redrawing the social contract that Bourguiba had sustained for the first
two decades of his presidency. It became apparent after Ben Ali abolished the
National Pact and reformed the constitution to increase term limits on the
presidency that he had no genuine interest in restoring popular participation in
politics, leaving the economy as his sole priority.505 However, underdevelopment
stemming from targeted regional favoritism severely undermined initiatives that
painted a successful picture vis-à-vis the Tunisian economy. Although the
deplorable marginalization of populations living outside the country’s Sahel
region is now known, the regime was content with hiding its development failures
to the country’s elites and middle class. Not only had the truth been concealed
from the Tunisian people but national assessments produced by the government
for consumption by international actors like the IMF and World Bank are now
known to have been completely fabricated to assuage skepticism that Tunisia’s
economy was fledging and to ensure continued favorability and financial
assistance from aforementioned international donors.506
• Terror: Of course, it would be impossible to justify authoritarian durability
without dedicating space to the power of coercion, the institutionalization of fear,
and the use of terror as means through which the Ben Ali regime maintained
political acquiescence.507 These particular strategies were ever-present in Tunisia,
and terror was directly linked to the regime’s survival according to most
interviewees. For one interviewee, her immediate response was simply “terror,”
505 Interview (14.6.1). 506 Interview (11.5.30). 507 Ref. Chapter 4.
174
which she later elaborated on by noting that terror was the only way the regime
was able to last. People had been so terrorized that only irreconcilable frustration
and hunger could trump the people’s level of fear because the “regime was so
oppressive.”508 Others explained that people wanted Ben Ali to leave power, but
“they had their limits and were not willing to sacrifice themselves at that time.”
One source noted that the events that occurred in 2010 are difficult to explain
when one considers the impact of collective sacrifice, which represents a
psychological breaking-point that must be reached in order for revolutions to
occur.509 This assessment has tried to justify that it was inevitable that Tunisians
would eventually go out into the streets and demand change, given the extensive
analysis that has been presented explaining what led them to do so, but it does not
attempt to understand how a popular decision to die for the sake of freedom was
reached either in this case or when assessing other examples from the Arab
Spring. People saw that the events of 2010 had become a collective and
unceasing effort, which according to some, made them believe that they too
should be willing to sacrifice themselves at that time.510
• Apprehensive Activism: One interviewee highlighted the nature of the Tunisian
mindset (stemming from the “Arab mind”511) as a plausible explanation for the
regime’s propensity to endure. He observed that Tunisians have had been pacifist
to injustice and that a popular resistance to speaking-out against wrongdoing was
508 Interview (2.5.23). 509 Interview (16.6.1). 510 Ibid. 511 Patai, Raphael. The Arab Mind. Hatherleigh Press Ltd.: New York, 2007.
175
embedded across [a beach] society; this point was clearly reiterated in previous
chapters, particularly when considering Ben Ali’s treatment of Islamists. People
were “not in a hurry” to push Ben Ali from power, because “he did not oppress
everyone, just pockets here and there that chose to challenge the government.”
Still, the regime’s brutality cannot be underappreciated, but until the last decade
of his reign, “most people had a decent living and just lacked individual freedoms
that were not that important for most people.”512 This passivity translated to the
political spectrum, and reveals that there was no “political armada of elites” that
wielded the power, the courage, or the incentive to speak out against the
unfavorable practices of their leader. One’s personal strife and willingness to
challenge Ben Ali determined an unsettling fate, since individuals could be more
easily targeted and silenced. Furthermore, individual action against the
government behemoth was ultimately unsuccessful, and required the coalition of
support that emerged in December 2010 to challenge the status quo. Tunisians, as
he continued, are prone to covet a “wait mentality,” that was particularly valuable
in this case, since the time they chose to react was particularly opportune and
appropriate.513 Another interviewee furthered this sentiment by stating that
people just kept making themselves believe that things were fine, but in reality
holistic restrictions grew “tighter and tighter” until they finally reached a breaking
point.514
512 Interview (20.6.3). 513 Interview (3.5.24). 514 Interview (8.5.27).
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• Hiding Regional Disparities: Economic conditions and social movements were
the main reason the regime collapsed, according to some interviewees.515
Specifically, the regime’s political and developmental regionalization can be
directly attributed to the source and trajectory of the uprisings in their early
stages, originating in the country’s forgotten interior regions. It was the people
from these same regions that were more apt to speak out against the regime, both
as a result of its diminished presence outside of metropolitan areas (i.e. RCD
informants, police municipalities) and because regions in the Interior did not have
adequate representation or power in the capital – no one to speak up for them or
defend their grievances.516 Keeping the Interior isolated and underrepresented
allowed the regime to focus its resources and attention on a privileged fraction of
the population, who for the most part lived decent lives until the regime’s latter
years. Rather than trying to improve the lives of those living in the Interior, the
regime chose to ignore its population and hide their sad realities from those who
might demand reform.
• Corruption Gradually Dilutes Legitimacy: Although the effects of corruption
do not require an expanded explanation beyond what has been outlined in this
thesis, the extent to which corruption disconnected the Ben Ali and Trabelsi
families from their people is a citable justification for the regime’s longevity. It
was not the existence of corruption per se that pushed his subjects to their
breaking-point but rather, its incremental increase over time that allowed him to
515 Interview (11.5.30). 516 Interview (3.5.24).
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“lose touch” beyond the point of “politeness or manners” as one interviewee
stated. A system of corruption based on alliances and spies that implicated
everyone, and consequently diminished criticism of the regime’s spending habits,
ensured the regime’s survival because many benefited from it, at least in the
beginning.517 However, “the dictatorship started to last too long,” as did its
thievery. Eventually, the ruling family was in charge of its own self-destruction
because it did not provide any economic or political reforms yet continued to steal
the state’s assets. Acceptance in the absence of freedom began to overpower
society’s passive negligence to Ben Ali’s legitimacy.518 This was especially
poignant for those who served in the government, “who probably just had enough
with the Trabelsis and Ben Ali.” As one interviewee noted, “they were not stupid;
they knew what was going on but were probably not brave enough to say
anything. They knew that the behavior of the families was wrong.”519
Digesting Revolution – Popular Revolt or Coup?:
One of the most meaningful observations that can be identified through this research
project is the enthusiasm extolled by the interviewees over prospects, and in some
accounts, hope that democracy and personal freedoms will be introduced to the country
for the first time in its modern history. As one interviewee noted, for her entire life, she
had grown depressed over the fact that she would likely live and die without ever
knowing elections or democracy in her own country. For Tunisians who were educated,
who had opportunities to travel and were given access to information beyond the control
517 Interview (20.6.3).; Interview (5.5.25). 518 Interview (10.5.30). 519 Interview (20.6.3).
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of the regime, these enticing freedoms were synonymous to a symbolic “forbidden fruit”
that had been within reach over the course of the country’s post-independence history,
but never attainable.520 For many, this realization has provided enough motivation to
ensure that Tunisia’s march toward liberalization is not derailed. However, it is clear that
the road ahead will be long, complicated, and likely disappointing at some junctures.
After only four months since the revolution took place, worrisome developments were
readily recognizable by interviewees, who made it clear that more arduous tasks were
ahead, and that the removal of the regime’s senior leadership was simply one of many
reforms that would still need to be carried out.
Although the transition on January 14, 2011 has been ascribed a “revolution”
many questions are unanswered over the circumstances under which the former president
left the country and leave many to believe that the popular deposal of the government that
we perceive from the Tunisian case may actually be absent, when considering some of
the opinions of interviewees. Nearly every interviewee challenged the assertion that Ben
Ali willingly left the country and consciously resigned from the presidency. One source
noted that “he had not intended to leave for good and that the departure was probably
prepared by his staff,” perhaps to save his life. The fact that he left a lot of things
(unspecified) that many presumed he would take with him if he knew he would not be
returning, particularly items of value in the Palace at Carthage, supports their views521
Furthermore, Article 56 of the Constitution was used to justify Ben Ali’s departure,
which stipulates a temporary leave of the president, but it had been repealed the next day,
providing further evidence that something had happened during the 40-hour period
520 Interview (5.5.25). 521 Interview (8.5.27).
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between his departure and the prime minister’s interim occupation of the presidency.
Ben Ali was aware that his “tools of oppression,” like the police and his personal guard
were strong enough to suppress the uprisings and it was uncharacteristic of him to have
given up so easily.522 It was presumed that he would return to Tunisia and
indiscriminately bombard Kasserine – an uncontestable catalyst of dissent – with force to
stop the protests.523 Allegedly, he had given the same order just five days prior to his
departure, but it had been ignored by the Army. When Ben Ali decided to leave on
January 14th, it was thought that he would return “after one or two weeks maybe.”
Not only was the president’s imminent departure a surprising revelation, but the
immediacy with which he chose to leave the country raises even more questions. How
could one of the most notorious authoritarian rulers have fallen from power in just 28
days? Interviewees were hard-pressed to answer this question and were ultimately upset
with themselves for not forcing him from power earlier, given how weak he proved to be.
For example, one interviewee stated bluntly that “no one ever imagined that Ben Ali
could ever be forced from the country” and she could not believe that the Tunisian people
had not realized that his regime was so “fake…such a paper tiger.”524 It was clear that in
December the movement was growing, but when it was announced that he had left the
country it shocked people because it happened so fast, especially since at the time as one
interviewee recalled, the “threat was not that great.”525 The question remains whether
this was just an uprising or a revolution. One interviewee was certain that the president
would not have left so quickly unless “the change had first come from within the
522 Interview (7.5.27). 523 Interview (17.6.2). 524 Interview (6.5.26). 525 Interview (17.6.2).; Interview (14.6.1).
180
regime.”526 Certainly, “something happened in the palace, but nobody knows exactly
what.” In an interesting parallel, Ben Ali’s mysterious overthrow resembles his own
power-grab from Bourguiba and the nebulous details that surrounded his own
constitutional coup. Nobody knows how he left the presidency.
Ben Ali’s Legacies:
As Tunisia buoys in the wake of the regime’s demise, nearly a year after Ben Ali’s
departure527, we assess the legacies that it has left behind. Some ramifications of not only
Ben Ali’s tenure as president, but also Bourguiba’s reign culminated a 53 year period of
dictatorship, rendering to no fault of their own, few Tunisians with the means to
conceptualize a culture of democracy, beyond the institutional definition that the term
embodies. An unfortunate heritage of half a century of nepotism has left the Tunisians
“disadvantaged in democracy.”528 Some have argued that Tunisians should not even be
attempting to question the idea of democracy and whether they are capable of becoming
democratic, but whether they understand what the ideas of liberty and freedom really
mean. Currently, “Tunisians view freedom as something closer to anarchy.” The stark
transition that has occurred and the current freedoms that post-revolutionary Tunisia now
offers to people are the same freedoms that were previously hijacked under the former
regime.529 With regard to political, social and economic conditions, the collapse of
authoritarianism presents a number of challenges as remnants of the former regime are
carefully dismantled.
526 Interview (14.6.1). 527 At the time of publication 528 Interview (14.6.1). 529 Interview (20.6.3).
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Politics:
With regard to politics, there appeared to be a cautious optimism among those who
participated in this research project toward the prospect for pluralism in the county.
There is new excitement over the formation of political parties and organizations that are
now able to broadcast their platforms across a wide spectrum of ideologies and interests,
and although their views are extremely diverse, corroboration and consensus prevail on
fundamental necessities to guide the country into the future, like “maintaining focus on
re-writing the constitution and devising strategies to build upon the country’s current
accomplishments.”530 Although no one can be convinced even now that a dramatic
democratic shift will, or even can occur after only several months since the country’s
political structure was “revolutionized,” people are confident that the country will never
become what it had been before. The fear that had once quelled the masses and inhibited
their desire to challenge the status quo has been erased and replaced with long-withheld
freedoms and civil liberties. Yet, many are convinced that political obstacles will long
overshadow the new political buds that the Arab Spring has yielded.
One interviewee who was involved in reconceptualizing the country’s political
legislation noted that introducing a new political system in Tunisia would be “un bras de
fer,” or exceptionally difficult despite her optimism that Tunisia is receptive to
democracy.531 The explosion of political parties and associations is a positive and normal
reaction in new democracies, but there are fears that these parties are more interested in
infighting or working to mutually disadvantage one-another, rather than encouraging the
530 Interview (5.5.25). 531 Interview (7.5.27).
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adequate development of more inexperienced politicians or activists. Parties are prone to
remain immature and inexperienced under this inhibiting competitive behavior, both
limiting the number of credible political participants, as well as, unevenly empowering
more organized political groups that operated under the regime, and in particular as one
source highlighted, Ennahda.532 It is preferred that political Darwinism will be the
catalyst for determining whether political parties will survive, not the malicious and
deliberate actions of political contenders at this early stage of development.
Conceptualizing Politics:
There is no model for democracy in Tunisia that exists; it needs to be learned and refined.
Many have highlighted the risks that democracy presents for such an inexperienced
population, where suddenly everyone is now able to participate in politics and express
opinions openly, “no matter what they are and regardless of how they contribute to the
debate.” Democracy, as much as it is viewed as the “Holy Grail” to post-authoritarian
societies, the power of democracy can pose an imminent threat when it is not understood
properly or if taken for granted. “A substantial portion of the population lacks the
maturity to understand the current stakes; they do not understand politics, political
parties, and politicians have failed to find better ways to communicate with them.” One
interviewee said that it appeared as though politicians were speaking tongues to less
educated fragments of society, and that the Islamists were likely to succeed because Islam
is the only discourse that is not foreign to the masses.533 It is reasonable to assume that
what people are not able to understand will make them uncomfortable, and until
532 Ibid. 533 Interview (8.5.27).
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politicians are able to better articulate their platforms they will lose support. Elections
present the same problem, since the average person’s ability to tell the difference between
discourse and manipulation in political platforms is essential to avoiding coerced support,
especially among the less educated, and more vulnerable populations534 – which in
Tunisia are the same people that inspired the revolution to begin with.
However, the sense of optimism and the energy surrounding the anticipated “next
step” in Tunisia’s political history is palpable. One interviewee assured me that “Tunisia
has been ready for democracy since independence,” and accurately pointed out that there
is no “precondition for democracy,” so Tunisians will adopt a system that works for
them. She noted that the problem now is not envisioning or even constructing a system
that facilitates the political transition, but lies with the country’s political actors.
Questions loom over the influence of political actors who were involved with the former
regime, knowing what their true motives are, and how they may impact the political
transition. Furthermore, there are meta actors that need to be considered, such as the
security apparatus, certain political parties, and the supporters of the former regime that
have the potential to sabotage the revolution.535
Similarly, it was widely recognized that the institutional aspects of a highly
sophisticated authoritarian regime represent yet another obstacle to fully revamping the
country’s political system. One interviewee recognized that even though the head of the
regime had been removed, the regime itself was still present and very powerful.536 The
regime was a “system that worked for 55 years,” and “it’s not easy to stop the machine.”
The enthusiasm that overshadowed Ben Ali’s departure had ended by May 2011 when
534 Ibid. 535 Interview (14.6.1). 536 Interview (11.5.30).
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this research was conducted, and activists and political parties were beginning to realize
that removing the head of the system did not dismantle it or consider the people that were
still around “who benefited from it.”537
The Economy:
The Tunisian economy was destroyed by the ruling family’s system of corruption which
as one interviewee noted, had reached “astronomical proportions.” The ruling family
hemorrhaged money from the state’s Central Bank and left the country bankrupt and did
great harm to social and welfare programs, liked education, healthcare, and development
projects; as a result of the former regime, the quality of the country’s education system
has dramatically decreased, and the healthcare system appears to be “beyond repair,”
according to one interviewee.538 There is hope that with Ben Ali’s departure corruption
will be reduced and condemned under an independent judicial system, hopefully
encouraging entrepreneurship and private business once again. One interviewee noted
that there was a revived confidence among the country’s economic leaders and that they
are now willing to invest without concerns that they will be approached by the
government and “stolen from” anymore.539 In a more disturbing trend, businessmen
associated with Ben Ali are returning to Tunisia after having financed the electoral
campaign of Ennahda, which in return has given them a kind of immunity from
prosecution by the new government.
Society:
537 Interview (11.5.30).; Interview (16.6.1). 538 Interview (16.6.1). 539 Interview (2.5.23).; Interview (5.5.25).; Interview (10.5.30).; Interview (14.6.1).; Interview (3.5.24).
185
In the aftermath, the regime’s downfall was a “good thing” for civil society, which has
flourished in its wake. Civil society has become active, “like a baby learning how to
walk.” People now recognize the importance of associations and organized politics,
according to one interviewee, and people are being attracted to the idea of “association.”
Tunisians are recognizing that they can be empowered by a well-structured civil society,
which the interviewee said is the “energy and vitamins of society.”540 In just four
months, there were a large number of truly independent NGO’s that were allowing the
Tunisian people to develop a sense of civic culture across a sprawling array of fields,
including science, the environment, and humanitarianism.541
Interviewees described a new, emerging culture that is gradually being integrated
into society. Families are able to have more discussions, new family dynamics are
emerging, and active discussions about governance, participating in elections, and what
kind of new government should replace the old system are occurring. Civil society is
eager to inform, and raise consciousness for important issues during the country’s
political transition, hoping to contribute necessary education to society about democracy
and civil liberties.542 “Before, people felt less than the West, but now they are energized,
serious about the transition, and believe that they can now be considered equal to the
Europeans.” Now Tunisians are breathing a new air and can “fly like birds.”543
However, participants recognize that in contrast to the aforementioned benefits, a
burgeoning, inflated civil society does have its detriments. “Too many people are trying
to express their interest and authority in the political sphere, so now there is a risk of
540 Interview (3.5.24). 541 Interview (7.5.27). 542 Interview (6.5.26). 543 Interview (3.5.24).; Interview (5.5.25).
186
“civil society desertification,” according to one interviewee.544 This new civil society
should be “taking baby steps to learn the issues and develop the habits to organize and be
effective in what it is doing.”545
Society in general has been scarred by the Ben Ali presidency. Interviewees
noted that he had a negative impact on society and led it to become more “conservative”
because of all of the regime’s failures.546 For one woman, the hatred for Ben Ali was so
fierce that her judgments on his presidency’s contributions to society were unavoidably
clouded. She could not identify any positives because of how much people suffered
under Ben Ali and believed that his authority tainted everything. “He acted like a great
savior to the people but failed them. He did not simply corrupt a handful of people in
Tunisia, he corrupted the values of society,” which will make it very difficult to repair.547
With regard to changes in the media, the assessment was bleak. One interviewee
responded in French that “tout a changé, rien a changé” (Everything has changed,
nothing has changed).” He continued that the way of reporting has not changed.
Credible journalists are expected to convey more than one side of a story, but
unfortunately in the traditional Tunisian media, “we are still waiting for professionalism,
ethics, pluralism and so on.” He believed that “the way of working has not changed, and
the people who are leading the media have not changed,” which further indicates that
considerable progress still needs to be made, even though Ben Ali is gone.548
Without question, thoughts about Ben Ali’s Tunisia before 2011 yield a legacy
marred by very specific characteristics. A despotic, corrupt, kleptocratic and mafia
544 Interview (14.6.1). 545 Interview (2.5.23). 546 Ibid. 547 Interview (16.6.1). 548 Interview (11.5.30).
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regime that maliciously exploited the Tunisian people reflects the frequency and intensity
of feedback from participants in this study as they responded earnestly to a question that
for the first time in their lives, they could answer freely: How would you describe the
Ben Ali regime? Such a simple question – one that perhaps instilled great fear for most
Tunisians, now embodies one of the more liberating side-effects of the Tunisian
revolution, and undeniably reconfigures a shocking reality for the Tunisian people, who
can now leave that life of fear and repression behind. Consensus in the answers across
the diverse sample of interviewees I included in this study was remarkable. Terms like,
“dictatorship,” “powerful mafia regime,” and “fake” predominated in their responses.
Interviewees highlighted the regime’s lack of transparency, corruption, and complete
disregard for individual freedoms.549 One interviewee said that “Ben Ali did not just
steal money, he stole the soul of the nation.”550
Deconstructing Ben Ali’s “Political Schizophrenia:”
In a final assessment of Ben Ali’s presidency, we must juxtapose the positives with the
negatives because they are directly correlated in a de facto zero-sum equation that is
prone to leave onlookers relatively indifferent in their opinions of his impact on Tunisia.
As one participant noted, “all dictators like to monopolize power and need to drive
legitimacy directly without representative institutions.” In Ben Ali’s example, the
situation was murky, because he chocked up his achievements under a “quantitative, not
qualitative measure.” “He built tons of universities, but the quality of education was
downgraded because there was no academic freedom or effective structures. He may
549 Interview (17.6.2).; Interview (5.5.25).; Interview (3.5.24). 550 Interview (16.6.1).
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have given more freedoms to women but no one enjoyed independence or political
participation. Behind every accomplishment, there was corruption that transferred
billions to the ruling family’s foreign accounts.551 He enhanced security and fought
terrorism, by constructing a police state that justified oppression and imprisonment to
ensure stability.”552 To be certain, he added, “nothing is perfect.” What Ben Ali said
“was always very interesting and democratic, but the actions to match those statements
were never credible and represented a type of political schizophrenia.”553
Conclusion:
The most important lesson that we learn from Tunisia’s dramatic political transition is
that revolutions are unpredictable and perplexing. Although we can isolate several
factors that can justify them after they have occurred, it can be difficult to deconstruct
them. Still, explaining the Tunisian revolution should not be a sole priority as the
country continues to carry out its political experiment. Rather, preparing the country’s
progression into the next phase of its history should be our primary concern. Embodied
in one of the famous mantras that emerged during the uprisings in December 2010,
“Khubz wa ma wa Ben Ali la’a” (Bread and water, no Ben Ali) denotes the sacrifices that
Tunisians recognized they were making to realize their own political future – by deposing
their dictator. “Being rich or poor is no longer what matters.”554 Serious drawbacks
expected in any revolution, like debt, contentious politics, and diminished security are
considered the “prices that must be paid” with the assurance that no “matter how things
551 Interview (5.5.25). 552 Interview (14.6.1). 553 Ibid. 554 Interview (5.5.25).
189
may be, they will never be worse than they had been before.”555 Instead, the Tunisian
people are experiencing freedoms that had been unimaginable just one year ago.
Although the course of this freedom has introduced new hazards, challenging hurdles,
and periodic setbacks, the people are finally able to “fly” uninhibited. In a curious
metaphor articulated by a young Tunisian woman of the generation that is accredited with
fueling the revolution: “We (the Tunisian people) are like birds whose wings were
clipped by Ben Ali, forcing us to stay on the ground. Free Tunisians are now flying;
birds can die, birds can get shot with a sniper, but at least we are flying as we never could
before.”556
555 Ibid. 556 Interview (6.5.26).
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APPENDICES:
A. Formal Interview Questions for all Research Subjects: Intro: What role did domestic politics play in the Jasmine Revolution in your opinion? Economics? Society? Education: What were your experiences like as a student in the Tunisian education system? What years were you in high school? Did you graduate? What years were you in college/university? What did you study? What were you taught about your national history? How were you prepared to enter the workforce? Politics: How would you describe the political scene at the onset of Ben Ali’s rise to the Presidency? (Elections, opposition parties, Islamists). How did domestic/internal politics change over the years and what effects did these changes have on your life (the lives of your friends and family)? How would you describe the Ben Ali Regime? What were its greatest flaws? (Human rights issues, media, freedom of speech, religious reforms, economic freedom, role of women, security forces). What were its greatest accomplishments? Did people discuss or communicate any frustrations? How? (Through which means?) Economics: What jobs have you worked in since you finished school? What was it like to work in (selected industry) during Ben Ali’s presidency? Do you notice any major changes in the workplace following Ben Ali’s departure? If so, what are they and why? If not, why do you think no changes have occurred? How would you describe the country’s economic climate throughout Ben Ali’s presidency? Job opportunities? Standard of living? Did your opinion of the regime’s policies on these subjects change over the years? What were your initial feelings at the onset of the economic uprisings in December? Did you believe these uprisings would bring about change? Services: What government services/welfare were/was available under Ben Ali? What did you think of these services? Revolution: How would you explain the uprisings in December 2010?
191
How had the Tunisian government reacted to dissent during previous demonstrations? What was different this time? Why do you think the government collapsed so quickly? Do you believe the transition has begun to meet the challenges presented by Ben Ali’s regime? Which areas still need improvement?
192
B. IRB Certification
193
C. C-1: Graffiti in Tunis: “Glory to the Heroic Martyr Muhammad Bouazizi” C-2: The Ministry of Interior, Habib Bourguiba Avenue, Tunis
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C-3: Error 404 message indicated a government-blocked website
195
C-4: Graffiti in Tunis: “Thank you Facebook” C-5: Poster in Tunis advertising the screening of a documentary on the Tunisian uprisings entitled “No Fear After Today”
196
C-6: Graffiti in Tunis: “Long Live Liberty” and “RCD OUT”
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